People in the Way: The Human Aspects of the Columbia River Project 9781487574406

Essentially this is a book about reality, the reality of the Columbia River project in relation to the people of the Arr

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People in the Way: The Human Aspects of the Columbia River Project
 9781487574406

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PEOPLE IN THE WAY

J.W. WILSON THE HUMAN ASPECTS OF THE COLUMBIA RIVER PROJECT

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS

© University of Toronto Press 1973 Toronto and Buffalo Printed in Canada Reprinted in 2018 ISBN

0-8020-5285-1

ISBN 978-1-4875-8571-6 (paper) LC

72-95792

Photographs on title-page spread courtesy of the National Film Board Photographs between pp. 82 and 83 courtesy of the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority

To the people of the Arrow Lakes, who have taught me much: may they live happily ever after.

Contents

PREFACE/ xiii

1 The setting / 3 2 The way it was / 8 3

The long shadow / 15 4 Enter Gulliver / 25

5

Feeling the wind / 29 6 The root of all evil? / 40 7 The broad brush / 56 8

People and plans / 71

9

The new communities / 78 10 The dead and the living / 90 11 On clearing / 92

12 A plethora of probiems / 100 13 The workings of Hydro / 116 14 After the flood/ 129

15 Fair and generous? /146 16 A well-behaved chapter / 161 EPILOGUE /

178

/181 1 The Property Owners' Guide (September 1964) / 183 APPENDIXES

2

The 1970survey / 191 REFERENCES / INDEX/

198

196

Photographs

between pages 82 and 83 1

The Narrows, 1964 2

The end of an era 3

The Hugh Keenleyside Dam 4

The new waterfront atNakusp 5

New Burton 6

New Edgewood 7

New Fauquier 8

The end of a chapter

Diagrams

1 The Columbia drainage basin / 4 2 The Arrow Lakes region, 1964 / 5 3 The displacement-resettlement pattern / 6

4 The halcyon days / 6 5

Columbia development proposals, 1959 / 17 6 Main flooded areas / 58 7 The Central Arrow Lakes area / 59 8

A new community/ 64 9 The organization ofBc Hydro, 1964 / 119

10 The Columbia project: working relationships, 1964 / 124 11 New Burton/ 134

12 New Edgewood / 135 13 New Fauquier/ 136 14 Residents' feelings/ 137

Preface

This is the story of the attempt to deal with the problems of human displacement and resettlement resulting from the Columbia River project. It is not a technical study, nor one which views its subjects through the lens of an academic discipline. Rather, it is intended to serve as a Canadian case study for students in fields such as engineering, planning, geography, and public administration. In it they will see how, in practice, all their fields have common ground in history, politics, and human behaviour, and how dependent they are on them. They will sense too how cloudy our crystal balls are and how frequently 'the best laid plans ... gang aft agley.' This has been a difficult book to write, partly for the reason implicit in the old saying that human fashions have always been governed by two urges the admitted urge to dress and the unadmitted urge to undress. Such impulses are hard enough for any writer to resist, but they were unusually strong in my case because the Arrow Lakes experience was not a clinical exercise for me. It brought me too close to the suffering of people I knew and liked. Nevertheless as an employee of the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority (I was responsible for resettlement planning for the 20 months from May 1964 to February 1966), I knew Hydro's problems and frustrations too. As a result of these involvements I frequently had strong feelings on one side or the other. But my real task now is not to weep or laugh, or to judge, but to understand. Much of my dilemma was resolved in the course of writing and rewriting certain chapters of this book, but strong feelings remained nevertheless. Parts of the book are somewhat critical of both BC Hydro and the Social Credit government of British Columbia. I hope that these criticisms are not

xiv Preface unfair. Another dilemma was the use of the first person in writing. But there was no real choice. Not to use the first person in some places would have been artificial and flimsy. And besides, I have long inveighed against the depressing impersonality and sterility of so much writing in the public service, holding that personal judgment should not be obscured when it need not be. So 'I' it is. I am grateful to the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority for giving me unrestricted access to its files; to J.W. Milligan, W.D. Mitchell, and R.W. Gross for their generous assistance; to Dr Hugh Keenleyside for many enlightening comments arising from his long and intimate experience with the Columbia River project; to my Columbia colleague, Gerry Fitz patrick, for his usual sturdy comments; to the Canada Council for financing my field work in 1970; to Al Hildebrand of the University of Waterloo for the excellent maps and diagrams; to many others who helped in various significant ways; and most of all to the people of the Arrow Lakes, who not only opened their doors to this 'Hydro man' but even filled out his questionnaires. This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Social Science Research Council of Canada, using funds provided by the Canada Council, and a grant from the Publications Fund of the University of Toronto Press. J .W. WILSON

Waterloo, 1972

PEOPLE IN THE WAY

1

The setting

The Columbia River is a giant by any standards. An international river, it flows through Canada for 500 of its 1200 miles before spilling into the Pacific Ocean near Portland, Oregon (Diagram 1) . It drains an area of more than 250,000 square miles, more than twice the area of the British Isles; from its head waters to the sea it fall through a height of half-a-mile; and at its peak it has produced flood flows at the mouth of more than a million cubic feet per second. In short, it is a river of awesome power; and before it was harnessed it wrought frightful destruction along its banks, as in 1948 when it drove 38,000 Americans from their homes and killed 41. By 1950 a great deal of its potential power in the United States had already been captured by the construction of many dams, including the Grand Coulee Dam. But these could not realize their full potential until more of the run-off above them was captured by the construction of additional dams, and this was now possible only on the upper reaches of the river in Canada. How this was agreed by Canada and the United States after many years of study and negotiation is told in chapter 3. Suffice it to say here that in 1964 the Canadian Parliament ratified the Columbia River Treaty and thereby undertook to build three storage dams on the Columbia River. One of these is the Arrow dam (now known as the Hugh Keenleyside Dam) at the foot of the Arrow Lakes. The Arrow Lakes area lies about 250 crow-miles from the coast, roughly halfway between Vancouver and Calgary (Diagram 1), and stretches from Castlegar, 20 miles north of the United States border, to Revelstoke, 150 miles further north (Diagram 2) . It is very rugged country and the mountains climb as high as 8000 feet, often rising directly out of the lakes. It

4 People in the way

DIAGRAM

1

is also varied and beautiful country, with narrow green valleys setting off the massiveness of the mountains. To the north, snow-capped peaks stand aloof behind the lakeside hills, their snow and rock an exciting contrast against the soft green below. Sunset is a memorable time in the lake country, with golden sunlight on one shore and quiet shadow on the other followed by the most exquisite shadings of darkness on land and water. The evening view from Nakusp to the folded mountains at the Narrows is one whose softness I never recall without emotion. Before the dam was built there were three main areas of settlement separated by long stretches of inhospitable shoreline: the northern area between Revelstoke and Arrowhead, the southern area between Castlegar and Renata, and between them the central area from Nakusp to Edgewood (Diagram 2). In 1954 these three areas, which for decades had been linked by boat service, were isolated from one another when the last of the sternwheelers, the Minto, was taken out of service. In terms of communications this left the north and south areas in reasonable shape, since they were conveniently linked by road to the main highway system of the province. The

The setting 5

THE ARROW LAKES REGION , 1964 20

20

€)

FERR Y

Miles RELIEF FROM SQUTHEASTERN BRITISH COLUMBIA, DE PT . OF 1..ANDS, FORESTS ANO WATER RESOURCES , VICTOR IA.

~.c.

1iaa2 .

DIAGRAM 2

central area, however, was left ill served, being connected in the west to Vernon by a sinuous eighty-mile road across the Monashee Mountains, and in the south-east to Nelson and Castlegar by a tortuous road almost a hundred miles long. The people displaced by the Columbia project in the northern section gravitated naturally to Revelstoke, and those in the southern section to the Castlegar area, for in neither section was there enough land to house a

6 People in the way j

'Revelstoke \ _; ,

NORTHERN AREA 600 displaced All resettlement toward Revelstoke or beyond

CENTRAL ARROW LAKES llOO displaced About ha If left region entirely, rest resettled locally

Needles

••Fauqu ier £

Edgewooc1J

1r !I

w

J

;;1

t;1l

'~

i'

THE DISPLACEMENT • RESETTLEMENT PATTERN 10

10

20

THE HALCYON DAYS

Settlement and Transportation in the Arrow Lakes about 1915

DIAGRAM 3

10

10

Miles

Miles

DlAORAM4

20

The setting 7 new community (Diagram 3). In consequence the task of resettlement arose only in the central area, and the main task of regional development lay in trying to improve the area's communications with 'the outside.' Thus this study concentrates on the area between Nakusp and Edgewood. But this is not an abstract tale of areas, communications, and displacements; it tells of a valley and its people and their tribulations when British Columbia's 'progress' overtook them. By today's largely urban standards both were distinctive and deserve a chapter to themselves.

2

The way it was

The Arrow Lakes region in 1964 hid more than it revealed to the superficial eye. In the first place it had been stagnant for decades, the population between Edgewood and Revelstoke (inclusive) having increased, according to the census, only from 6150 to 6475 between 1921 and 1961. In fact its halcyon days were far behind it, having occurred before the First World War. In those days more than thirty small settlements adorned the shores of the lakes (Diagram 4). Many of these have since disappeared without trace; others still yield unexpected evidence such as fire hydrants and rotted timber sidewalks long overgrown by the long grass and bush. The thread connecting these communities was the lake itself, on which sternwheelers plied busily, shuttling between railheads at Arrowhead in the north and Robson in the south, a distance of almost a hundred miles. In the heyday of the lakes more than half-a-dozen sternwheelers were in operation, not to mention ferries and barges. Before the First World War the Arrow Lakes region lived primarily on lumbering and mining and contained, at Arrowhead, the largest sawmill of its day in the British Empire. The economy of the Lakes depended on the power of the horse, and to feed the teams hay was produced locally in considerable quantities. Tree fruits and milk were also produced. Farm lands were advertised and sold, not always accurately or ethically, in Winnipeg and London, and many immigrants settled from the United Kingdom. However, it became clear that for the production of fruit the Arrow Lakes climate was inferior to that of the adjacent Okanagan Valley and the crops were produced too late to be competitive on the market. With the onset of war the English settlers 'joined up' in force and many

The way it was 9 did not return. Lumbering on the lakeshores declined in the twenties and the Canadian Pacific Railway reduced its lake services. During the thirties, despite total unemployment in a technical sense, hardship is said to have been tolerable, because the small holdings were able to provide a subsistence living. In the forties the lumber-based economy revived following the granting of a tree farm licence to Celgar Limited, and many owners of small holdin~ joined the company's logging force. Many of their holdings were allowed to go wild, creating a misleading impression of general poverty. In 1954 the last of the stemwheelers, the faithful Minto, was taken out of commission. The lake then ceased to be the main street of the region, and in effect the Arrow Lakes became not one region but three, focused on Revelstoke, Castlegar, and Nakusp respectively. The area also became totally dependent on the road 'system' (a euphemism of the first order), although traffic across the lakes continued to be accommodated by six ferries, a pleasant if somewhat archaic mode of travel in the 1960s. The stock of usable land was limited to about fifty square miles, the only sizable area being that between Revelstoke and Arrowhead, most of it uncleared and of poor quality. 1 The lakeshore lands were either long, narrow strips or little shelves of land, and of the total only about ten square miles had been developed. From any but a purely local perspective it could scarcely be said that a significant amount of agricultural land was to be inundated by the Arrow Lakes reservoir, nor was much of that being farmed by any ordinary definition of the word.2 This does not mean, however, that it was not valuable to its owners; it was frequently said that a small holding was worth 500 dollars per person per year, and recent studies in Newfoundland suggest that this is not an unreasonable estimate (12]. If home-raised milk, meat, vegetables, and fruit are added to bartered goods, lumber and fuel from the forests, a mortgage-free house, negligible taxes, and even a minimal cash income, the result may be a very satisfactory living, different though it is from the wage-based domestic economy of the typical citydweller. Overall, the impression given to the visitor in 1964 was that of a Rip van Winkle valley, much of it uncleared, uncultivated, unkempt, and dotted with weathered houses of yesterday. Much of the land had been allowed to 1 This excludes the lnonoaklin Valley and the Brouse area, neither of which was affected by the Columbia development. 2 Only five farms were recorded by the 1951 census, a farm by that definition being a holding of at least three acres, or of one to three acres yielding agricultural products valued in 1950 at 250 dol1ars or more.

10 People in the way go to seed even before the first alarm was given in 1954 by the Kaiser proposal.8 Nevertheless it was a firmly held tenet of the inhabitants that the constant threat of the Columbia development had perpetuated the neglect of the valley thereafter, despite the stabilization of the local economy. So much for the land. What of the people? To understand Hydro's task it is necessary to understand them at least a little, and the first thing to record is their diversity, especially in education and experience. While almost all were in some way closely bound up with the land through logging or farming, there were a few among them with, for example, university and English public school education, considerable experience of business and government far beyond the valley, and extensive foreign travel. On the other hand there were many people who had worked in or around the forests for fifty years in essentially manual jobs, and whose experience was much more limited. To ignore this diversity would be to court misunderstanding throughout this book. In 1964 there was no unemployment - among the employables, that is. Celgar's logging operations, centred in Nakusp and based on sustained yield management of 2.5 million acres of Crown land, saw to that. (The logging operation provided the raw material for Celgar's modem sawmill and pulpmill just south of the Arrow dam.) There were many not employed, however - mostly older people, of whom the smaller communities had a high proportion. These were mainly people who had lived in the valley for decades and for whom the whole landscape, natural and human, was a comfortable tapestry of things familiar. Many of them were widows or widowers; many depended on old age or war service pensions; some lived on welfare payments; many bore the stigmata of age and neglect in the form of chronic illnesses; and many lived in solitude, being scarcely visible to the casual visitor. To them the valley was a kind place; though not developed in terms of commercial efficiency, the land still met many of their needs, many of their homes were free of mortgages, and neighbours were usually kind and helpful in matter-of-fact rural fashion. For some at least the valley was more than a kind place: it was a chosen place. And to anyone who knew the lakes at all and who did not view them through urban-tinted glasses, that was understandable. For it was not only, in rugged Canadian terms, a lovely place, as no one seeing its velvetshadowed summer evenings could possibly forget. It was also a place of casual ways and little pretence, where individuality could find expression 3 This was a proposal by the Kaiser Aluminum Company of the us to build a low dam across the lower end of the Arrow Lakes. It was vetoed by the government of the day in Ottawa, despite its acceptance by Premier Bennett.

The way it was 11 largely untrammelled. As one resident put it: 'The good thing about this country is you can do as you damn well please. And that's the way the people feel about it. They're mighty independent.' The Arrow Lakes are a man's world and the men are what the press likes to call 'two-fisted' (what else?). Nature is still their antagonist, and while they now have the diesel caterpillar as an ally ( which merely enables them to do more, faster), they are still the handy, practical people they always were, moving rocks, trees, and dirt around in matter-of-fact fashion. 4 Theirs is a life still governed by the elements, by snow and ice, by rain and water, sometimes by fire and wind; and it is a life in which individual commonsense and alertness are the best guarantee that a man will return home in one piece. It is also a life with certain insistent demands which have no parallel in the city: when the forest ranger calls for fire-fighting crews, you may not refuse. And this spirit spills over into other situations less traumatic than forest fires. The woman in this picture is somewhat the pioneer type. To survive at work a man must be well fed, well clothed, and of good cheer. It is the woman's job to see that he is, and in the not-so-old days of wood stoves and hand pumps this was a full-time job. This is a world of staples which do not exist in the city - staples which are often used instead of money: land and lumber, animals, heavy machines, and human labour. In combination with a little cash income they were able to support an almost moneyless life for those who were industrious and imaginative. I knew one man who made snowshoes, cutting and bending the frames in summer, stringing them in winter; and another who made most of his cash needs from a few well-tended walnut trees. It follows that this is a land where the individual still counts, where a man is known and judged for his visible human qualities. Yet another point of difference is that this is still a world which is run not so much by paper as by word-of-mouth. A scrawled notice on the door of the post office or the local store will suffice to brief a whole community. In the same way the communal needs of a village will be explored and met. Does the credit union (itself a more communal institution than a bank) need a new fence? Edgewood a new tennis court? Word circulates and out come the men, backed by their women, with the muscles, tools, machines, and 4 A friend in Nakusp delights to tell how one day as she sat chatting in the home of a friend whose husband is a logging contractor, a power saw poked through the end wall of the house and proceeded to cut out a bottle-shaped panel, for all the world like scissors and cardboard. The wife had apparently remarked that it would be nice if they had a fireplace; the husband was merely getting on with the job!

12 People in the way materials, and the job is on. This does not mean, of course, that the Arrow Lakes are the twentieth century paradise. Not everyone contributed, or did so equally, but enough did to make the communities function. Along with this goes a strong sense of the essential. What does it matter if the ball park is overgrown with weeds? Come the twenty-fourth of May it will be cut, not before. And along with that went a tendency to make do. Build your shed or paint your garage when you can, and if you have to stop halfway because of money, so what? It can wait. And if the Vancouver Sun arrives two days later (as it always did) is that a disaster? The social structure of the communities also seemed to reflect their inhabitants. In ordinary times they seemed to get along with a minimum of organization, none of the communities in the central area being incorporated in 1964. When organization was seen to be necessary it was often provided by the Women's Institute or church groups. (The men, it appeared, had to have much more compelling reasons to organize, such as memories of war years or simple aridity, both of which were ministered to at 'the Legion' or the Leland Hotel in Nakusp.) At least some of the communities were divided by internal conflicts based sometimes on politics, sometimes on personalities; and in most it was difficult to identify an acknowledged community leader. In this sense there was no existing 'power structure' for Hydro to grapple with. Consensus apparently arose out of common need or crisis, and spokesmen, if not leaders, with it. It should not be imagined that the people of the Arrow Lakes were in any sense homogeneous or united against even the Columbia project. People who would lose their homes, for example, were usually far more deeply concerned about the project than their more fortunate fellows. In fact many of those not personally affected regarded the Columbia development as simply an economic shot-in-the-arm for the region. But there were others who realized that a large part of their environment would be altered. And this environment was widely used and appreciated, for the lakes were intensively used in the local forest operations and to some extent by the residents for fishing. But beyond that the people and their communities had always looked to the water for transportation and were thoroughly lake--oriented. Thus any great changes in the condition of the lakes would be keenly felt by many people. Even the older people showed great differences in reaction to displacement. For some the ties of place and memory took precedence over more mundane considerations. But for many others the comfort of urban facilities, especially medical services, was stronger and ultimately took them either to Nakusp or to the bigger communities beyond the Arrow Lakes. There were significant differences too between young and old. Anyone under twenty in 1964 had grown up in time of comparative affluence and mobility.

The way it was 13 Many of them would have left their home communities in any event, mostly for education, for the day of the one-room school is long past. The little communities reflected the people and their history. They were irregular, unkempt, and gap-toothed from the attrition of time. The houses, all timber, often reflected the age as well as the outlook of their owners. The epitome of these communities was Renata. Renata lay twenty miles north of Castlegar and was connected to the rest of the world by a cable ferry and a roller coaster road which was not for the faint of heart. Less than half-a-mile square and edged by sandy beaches, Renata was known for its magnificent cherries, the product of a benign combination of soil, setting, and micro-climate. In good years Renata marketed 7200 crates of cherries and 5000 of peaches, and in its biggest apple year it shipped 12,000 boxes; all this from about thirty growers. But Renata was much more than a climate and cherries; it was a way of life, idyllic and irreplaceable. Here could be felt most keenly the tragedy of those who were uprooted by the project. Every tree, every stone, every house was laden with memories, still alive, of eighty years of community as very few city-dwellers ever come to know it. (It was in Renata that I got a real sense of the significance for the remaining inhabitants of the burning of homes which could not be removed. This was apparently necessary to prevent vandalism and re-occupation by others; but it was a terrible, searing experience for long-time neighbours still living nearby.) It was therefore fitting that Hydro should publish The Story of Renata [26], a history written by two residents of the village recording something precious destroyed by technological progress.is But even before 1964 there were signs of change in Arcadia. Even then it was no longer the undisputed domain of the self-reliant individual. Most of the land was now worked by Celgar, and most of the men were its employees. Far fewer men in the region were entirely responsible for their own decisions. Where once they managed and worked their own lands, bought their own equipment, hired their own help, marketed their own logs, they now worked for a pay cheque on lands for which they were not responsible, to a schedule produced in Vancouver, by a day which stopped at 4 p.m. regardless of the state of the job. As for the young, it was already decreed that very few would know the whole life or, in community terms, the organic life their fathers knew. But the purpose of this chapter is not to lament the passing of an era and a race, though we might well do so. It is to portray and interpret the S Starting as a mass of unorganized notes and records, this history was whipped into shape by my wife Renate, a professional writer, who got roped in by a process best described as voluntary conscription.

14 People in the way scene into which Hydro was propelled in 1964. This was a scene of many faces. Its economy was of the twentieth century, as was its general technology; every home had power, and most had cars and television. It was a far cry from being 'the Ozarks of Canada,' as it had been described by ignorant and supercilious outsiders. At the same time it was, in the public sense, an area of neglect - its land and communities for reasons which we have discussed, its roads and communications for reasons which were probably connected with the imminence of the Columbia project. Most of all, it was a region which was permeated by social ways and standards which were not those of the urban majority of Vancouver or Victoria, where decisions were made. This then was the stage setting for the Columbia River project in 1964, a stage across which a long and ominous shadow had just been cast.

3

The long shadow

In The Tempest Shakespeare speaks of a 'destiny to perform an act whereof what's past is prologue' - a glove-fitting description of BC Hydro's situation in the Arrow Lakes in 1964. For the past was indeed a prologue to the present. Thus the purpose of this chapter is to trace the evolution of the Columbia River scheme primarily as the people of the Arrow Lakes saw it. Only thus is it possible to understand their attitudes and reactions to Hydro when it first took up its task. In looking over accounts of the evolution of the Columbia project one is struck by the extent to which the people affected by it lived for years in a fog of ignorance, purely technical information, and rumour. It is true that the Arrow Lakes News featured regular letters from the area's political representatives in Victoria and Ottawa, but it must be remembered that almost all the action took place at the administrative level within the confines of the federal and provincial governments of the day. Furthermore, the Arrow Lakes region was represented in those days by an opposition member at both the provincial and the federal levels so that access to current information was not easy. Thus one senses a feeling of impotence in the face of remote events which could scarcely be discerned, far less influenced, by those to whom they were of most immediate significance. It started in 1944 when the governments of Canada and the United States requested the International Joint Commission to determine whether further development of the water resources of the Columbia basin would be practical and advantageous to both countries. For this purpose the Commission established the International Columbia River Engineering Board, which carried out technical studies for the next fifteen years.

16 People in the way These were fruitful years, for not only did they see the gradual emergence of the dimensions and possibilities of the Columbia River in Canada, b~ they witnessed the acceptance by the United States of two important principles: ( 1 ) that Canada was entitled to fifty per cent of the additional power which would be generated by existing American power plants as a result of Canadian storage schemes, and (2) that under the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 Canada was fully entitled to divert the Columbia or its tributaries as she might see fit. This acceptance, which evolved over several years of stormy negotiation, was due to the engineering skill, shrewdness, and toughness of General Andrew McNaughton, chairman of the Canadian Section of the International Joint Commission during these years [23]. However, the peculiar significance to this story of McNaughton's work lies not so much in these principles, fundamental as they were, as in the so-called McNaughton plan for the Columbia River. And this in turn stemmed from the unusual configuration of the river and some of its upper tributaries in relation to the Canada-us border (Diagram 5). The head waters of the Kootenay River rise in Canada 150 miles north of the border, and thence flow south into the us before returning to Canada. However, it would have been possible to dam the Kootenay at the border and divert it northwards into the headwaters of the Columbia. This McNaughton proposed to do, in order not only to increase the amount of water flowing down the Canadian stretch of the Columbia but also to make full use in Canada of the fall (head) available there. Given this, the McNaughton plan did not propose to dam the Arrow Lakes, although the Murphy dam it proposed downstream would have affected the lake levels to a minor extent. In 1959 the Engineering Board produced its report (13] which Waterfield in Continental Waterboy [27, p. 19] describes as 'an esoteric document which none of us fully understood.' This outlined three possible schemes for the development of the Columbia - the McNaughton plan, the plan favoured by the United States, and a compromise between the two (Diagram 5). These were to be studied by special negotiating teams appointed by the two countries in order to decide which project should be undertaken and under what conditions. Up to this time the people of the Arrow Lakes had apparently felt no threat, having been heartened both by McNaughton's opposition to an Arrow dam and by reservations which had been expressed by Be's Attorney General, Robert Bonner, regarding the loss of fertile land. It seems therefore to have shocked them to learn late in 1959 - through their participation in the work of a regional committee of Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce - that the provincial government now favoured a scheme incor-

The long shadow 17

COLUMBIA DEVELOPMENT PROPOSALS 1959 ~ For the sake of simplicity the third plan (Coppei Creek Diversion, which would

have diverted the upper pail of the Kootepay River into the Columbia) has been omitted.

DIAGRAMS

porating the High Arrow Dam. It must have shocked them even more when the negotiating team announced by Prime Minister Diefenbaker in January 1960 did not include General McNaughton. From this point on their champion took no further part in the international aspects of the Columbia negotiations, although he participated in the Ottawa-Victoria discussions, spoke and wrote vigorously on behalf of his plan, and took part in the parliamentary hearings held in the spring of 1964. The negotiations continued in places far from the Arrow Lakes until, as Waterfield records, in January 1961 'We began hearing rumours that an agreement between Canada and the United States was finalized ... and would be signed in Washington ... on 17 January 1961' [27, p. 35]. The Treaty was signed by President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Diefenbaker even though Premier Bennett had by this time notified the government of Canada of his reservations regarding the proposed financial arrangements. Incidentally the information gap facing the residents about this time is well illustrated by a letter written by the Honourable R.G. Williston, BC minister of lands and forests, to the N akusp Chamber of Commerce on 17 November 1960, in which he said, 'the report of the International Colum-

18 People in the way bia River Engineering Board is the only one available to the public at the present time. We do not have any spare copies of this report, but it can be obtained from the Canadian Section of the International Joint Commission in Ottawa.' At this point the Columbia scheme entered a second phase from the Arrow Lakes point of view - the public hearings phase. But the two phases were connected in the minds of the residents by one significant event. On 5 October 1960 Mr Williston had written to the Nakusp Chamber of Commerce: 'Public hearings will be held in the areas affected. If the [water] licences are granted the way will be open for the two federal governments to proceed to treaty discussions. ' 1 This was a time of particular confusion in the two-rivers (Peace and Columbia) controversy in British Columbia and there is no reason to suggest that Mr Williston did not write this in all honesty. Nevertheless his concept of proper procedure was overrun by the pace of the international arrangements and the Treaty was signed only three months later without local consultation. Thus it seemed to the people of the Arrow Lakes that to hold local hearings after substantial agreement had been reached by the two countries was to add insult to injury. It is true that the hearings could result in conditions being attached to the granting of the water licence, as indeed was the case. But that was not what concerned the residents of the Lakes. They opposed the High Arrow proposals as such, and they entertained no hope that the water comptroller, a provincial civil servant, could override a project already approved by his political masters. Thus the hearings which were held in the Arrow Lakes region in September and October 1961 were conducted against the backdrop of what was regarded as a broken promise and in an atmosphere of some cynicism. As one man wrote in 1970, 'They were a farce.' Hearings were held at three points in the region: Revelstoke, Nakusp, and Castlegar. These are recounted in some detail in Continental W aterboy [27, chapters 5-7], and are, of course, also the subject of official transcripts. What is of concern here is how the Nakusp hearings of 29 and 30 September 1961 seemed to the local residents. The following impression of that appearance was gained from several sources - the Arrow Lakes News and several citizens who attended. The hearing was orderly and the News on 5 October expressed general 1 Any use of natural waters in BC requires the issue of a water licence under the Water Act and this applied as a matter of course to BC Hydro in this case. Mr Williston was the minister responsible for the administration of the act, and the civil servant specifically responsible was the water comptroller.

BC

The long shadow 19 appreciation of the way in which it was run: 'Mr A.F. Paget, Comptroller of Water Rights of Victoria, chaired the meeting and made an excellent job of it. He made it clear he would stand for no interruptions, no nonsense and the business was carried on with the decorum of court proceedings.' Further, 'it was learned that Mr Paget need not have brought the hearing to Nakusp and ... the residents of the area were even more appreciative of his decision to hold them here.' The human context therefore was by no means bad. The transcript shows that exchanges were generally conducted in a spirit of give-and-take and the chairman showed considerable understanding of the position of many people to whom public expression and formal procedure were something of a trial. Nor was spontaneous humour lacking, as provided for example by a witness who was asked how much land she owned and replied, 'a hundred acres, sir, and if I wasn't on oath it would be two hundred.' 2 Even so, the general impression left by the hearing was not a favourable one for Hydro. 3 In the first place the Comptroller made it clear that the subject the audience most wanted to talk about and had spent much time in preparing to argue - the Arrow project and its justification - was not admissible, and even though he allowed people a great deal of latitude in their remarks about the Treaty and its inadequacies in their eyes, it was understood that inadmissible material would not go into the record of the meeting. This itself seemed to the people to imply a degree of futility about the hearing. What was the point if they couldn't discuss the question nearest their interests? Second, the appearance and behaviour of the Authority's delegation created a bad impression. The News says that Hydro was represented by about a dozen people at the Revelstoke hearing, and the impression the local people seem to have formed was that they were being overborne by a battery of experts. Then there was a certain amount of legalistic, and in their eyes officious, behaviour an the part of the Authority's counsel. He seemed constantly to be jumping up and challenging people's qualifications and thus their right to express views on matters in which they happened to be vitally concerned, if not professionally qualified. And lastly there was the distressing fact that so many of the audience's questions about their personal or communal interests could not be answered 2 A comment made to me by a perceptive resident, a native of another valley, is worthy of note here. He observed that on the whole the residents of the Central Arrow Lakes were pleasant and good tempered people, more so than in certain other valleys. 3 Strictly speaking this should read BC Power Commission. Hydro as such did not exist until 1962, as noted in chapter 13.

20 People in the way specifically or unequivocally. 'Oh, that's a simple engineering matter' was one frequent response that rings in many ears even today. The plain fact was that Hydro did not then have specific answers to give, and in many cases would not have them for a good half-dozen years. That was not necessarily the Authority's fault, but it gave cold comfort to the apprehensive victims of the project and created a less than helpful image of Hydro. For their part the local people presented several excellent briefs, espe-cially on agriculture and forestry. The statement that best expresses their sentiments was presented by Mrs Jean Spicer and reported as follows in the A"ow Lakes News. But first the reader should be apprised that this brief was no mere propaganda exercise. The Spicers' view was beautiful; their farm was a model of intensive production; their attachment to the valley was real and not untypical. Llke many others on the Arrow Lakes my husband and I live here for preference in comfort and contentment in the way of life we have chosen. We love our land and consider ourselves among Be's most fortunate citizens and that means among the most fortunate in this world. The beauty and the climate of this valley rank among the highest. I have some authority for saying this because while I have spent most of my life in BC, I have made visits of some length to England and the beauty spots of Spain, Italy, France, Austria, and other countries, and each time I have returned to Nakusp I have realized why their beauty did not seem so superlative to me- it is because I have lived here with beauty surrounding me most of my life. As we are now situated we feel that we have the best family farm in North America. Having started with very little money, we have put into the improving of our farm all the hard work of which we are capable, both to increase its production and to add to its beauty, with the result that we now have one of the most productive farms per acre in BC, and also one that is becoming increasingly ornamental. The High Arrow Dam would take all this from us, and we would lose the concentrated efforts of our hearts and hands for the last twelve years. We have built up our farm for ourselves and our children believing we would be allowed to go on living here, and I object most strongly to having it all taken away from us. Most particularly I object to losing it for a scheme which has not yet been proved to be permanently beneficial to BC. Even if it could be shown to be profitable at the present time, it is a sad thing that love of money should be put before love of country. No amount of money would ever repay us for what we would lose - our home, our livelihood, and our whole way of life. I realize that this objection is a very small thing when viewed against the

The long shadow 21 vastness of the Columbia development, but when you add to it the feeling of the many farm women up and down the lakes who feel the same way, it should carry a little weight. Those I have talked to feel almost unanimously as I do. They love their homes and their own pieces of land, they have put the best of themselves into improving both, and they feel sick at heart at the thought of leaving them, and perhaps even more sick at heart at the disruption of their family and social lives. Dr Keenleyside says there will be quite a problem resettling some of the older people - that is putting it mildly. Through the years our little communities have become family groups with people living near their parents and so on. It would be very difficult to move these groups intact, and it would cause great hardship in many cases if they are split apart as they would be. The general appearance of indecision and the inability to give satisfactory answers to questions in these hearings have succeeded in shaking the confidence of myself and others in the ability of the Power Commission to handle a project of this magnitude and I now have even more grave misgivings that the High Arrow and related project will end up by being a serious burden on the taxpayer and I am still more convinced that this vast High Arrow storage is not going to be of any permanent benefit locally. If High Arrow is so tremendously profitable why cannot the Power Commission offer us a bold imaginative program of reconstruction, with broad, blacktop highways, model villages and secondary industries run on the cheapest power in the world, instead of a jumble of makeshift plans qualified by 'ifs' at every turn. Are not we, the main sufferers from High Arrow, entitled to a major slice of the pie or have not my first suspicions been confirmed, and there is really no pie at all? I sincerely hope that you will not grant this water licence which would ask such enormous sacrifices from its inhabitants.

But the long wait was by no means over in September 1961. There were still almost three years of sporadic activity to go, years full of illusions and disillusions, always at a distance, always behind an information fog. Nor did the people of the Central Arrow Lakes have solidarity in their own area or at either end of the Lakes, for there seem to have been many who regarded the Columbia proposal as a blessing. The mainstay of political hope in the earlier part of this period was anchored in the Liberal party, then in opposition in Ottawa, and particularly in the leader of the opposition, L.B. Pearson, who on 13 April 1962 had written to the Nakusp Chamber of Commerce' ... I agree with you that it is imperative to renegotiate the Columbia River Treaty.' To a lesser extent it was anchored in Jack Davis, a former official of the BC Electric Company

22 People in the way and obviously on the way up in federal politics, who wrote to the Chamber in May 1963 appearing to approve 'changes in the present draft Treaty which are necessary to safeguard our national interests . .. I prefer the approach which involves the construction of the non-controversial Treaty dams first.' This impression of support was by no means discounted when on 6 June 1963 Mr Pearson, then prime minister, wrote to Richard Deane in Rossland, BC, 'my government intends to renegotiate certain aspects of the Columbia River Treaty.' In this, as in the previous letters quoted, there is a degree of generality which, intentional or not, provided scope for very wide interpretation of the 'certain aspects.' But in Nakusp there seemed to be reason for some confidence that might as well as right was on their side. Not only that, but there was also the belief that British Columbia's provincial interests coincided with those of the Arrow Lakes. The government of the province had in 1962 already made a start on the huge Peace River development, which was to produce over 2 million kilowatts. It was commonly believed that British Columbia did not need the Columbia project as well. This view, however, did not reckon with Premier Bennett's mercantilistic instincts or his tremendous drive for the development of his province. At his insistence and in accordance with a permissive clause embodied in the Treaty the United States arranged to dispose of Canada's share of the downstream benefits and to recompense British Columbia for them in cash:4 By thus exercising the prerogatives of his province in respect of its natural resources Premier Bennett outflanked the federal government and unhorsed Pearson and Davis as prospective champions of opposition to the High Arrow Dam. Thus when a Canada-BC agreement was signed in Ottawa in July 1963 and given international approval by Canadian and American representatives in January 1964, the fate of the Arrow Lakes was virtually sealed. However the matter was not yet completely resolved, unless one is prepared to regard scrutiny by a parliamentary committee and consideration by the Canadian Parliament as a matter of form. (That one member of the standing committee on external affairs thought so - at least as regards the committee's function - was clear when Dr L.E. Kindt put to Paul Martin, the secretary of state for external affairs, a presumably rhetorical question: 4 It had already been agreed that Canada and the United States would share equally the additional power made possible at existing plants on the Columbia river in the USA. It was now agreed that Canada's half would be marketed in the United States by a us consortium of utility companies and Canada paid in cash, in advance, this lump sum being used to construct the dams. The instrument by which the existing Treaty, as yet unratified, was qualified to do this was the 'Protocol.'

Thelongshadow 23 'Does this not put the committee into the position of being a rubber stamp?'11 And while Mr Martin did not accept this suggestion it was clear that the committee had under the circumstances virtually no power to amend the Treaty, although it could take the much more drastic step of recommending its rejection.) In the House itself, it could be reasoned, the Conservatives would support the Treaty, which had been negotiated and signed by the Diefenbaker government and remained unchanged in substance, while the Liberals would support the Protocol, which had been negotiated by the Pearson government and had the support of Premier Bennett. Nevertheless the hearings in Ottawa went on through April and May in 1964, during which General McNaughton fought his last uncompromising battle against the Treaty, and Mr H.W. Herridge, the perennial member for the West Kootenays, acquired or intensified a virulent personal hatred for Hydro's chairman, Dr Keenleyside. (This is not recorded as a petty triviality. Mr Herridge, an articulate man of persuasive charm, was an institution in his days as the valley's federal member, and his unrelenting and venomous attacks on everything relating to Hydro cannot have helped the people of the Arrow Lakes to accept the Columbia works.) One more thing remains to be recorded - not a matter of substance but one which must have seemed to the people of the Lakes to be the final S The essence of this fascinating exchange is as follows: Mr Kindt: ... As I understand it our function here is to improve this treaty. Mr Martin (Essex East): No, not at all. Mr Kindt: Well, to improve the situation with respect to Canada. Mr Martin (Essex East) : No, your function is to indicate whether you approve of what the government has done ... Any variation of it would of course involve a repudiation of the position taken by this government or by its predecessors in regard to the treaty. Mr Kindt: Does this not put the committee into the position of being pretty much a rubber stamp? Mr Martin (Essex East): Not at all. By careful study I think you can bring out the merits of various arguments, but we have agreed, as I stated in parliament, that after we had negotiated with the United States ... then we would enter into an exchange of notes with the United States, which we have done. But before we would ratify, we would come back to parliament and parliament could accept the course taken by the government or reject it. Mr Byrne: I was simply going to ask the minister if when the former administration suggested that the treaty be put before a parliamentary committee, it was prepared to have it at that altered in any way? Mr Martin (Essex East): Of course not. The treaty was signed in Washington, by the President of the United States, by the Secretary of State for the United States, by the Prime Minister of Canada, and by the Minister of Justice ... under our practice, the government of the day takes its responsibility, and having taken its position and responsibility, then it asks parliament to approve or to reject [8, p. 67].

24 People in the way indignity. On Friday, 5 June 1964, when the House of Commons considered the Columbia River Treaty and Protocol, only 108 members were present out of a total of 264. The Treaty passed by a vote of 92 to 16, the New Democratic party alone dissenting. It then went to the Senate on 10 June J 964 where it was not deemed worthy of a formal vote but was passed, none dissenting. Thus ended for the people of the Anow Lakes twenty years of waiting, of never knowing, of trusting and being let down, of being overborne, and ultimately of being ignored. For them this was only the end of the beginning of the now-you-see-it-now-you-don't dance of politicians and their advisers. But it was not an auspicious start for the last act. For now the harsh deeds implicit in the Treaty had to be done as best they might, in the presence of those who had lived through the long years and had little reason to be complaisant or co-operative with those responsible for the execution of the Columbia project.

4

Enter Gulliver

Upon ratification of the Columbia River Treaty and the Protocol amending it, the curtain came down on the prologue. As we have seen, that prologue had been a protracted, sporadic, acrimonious dialogue which had produced up to this point more kilowords than kilowatts. It had been played against many backdrops - Washington, DC, Victoria, BC, the Arrow Lakes, and finally and decisively, Ottawa. It had been largely a script of 'heavy' roles the governments of Canada, the United States, and British Columbia - and so far the people of the Arrow Lakes had spoken only the briefest of parts. But now the prologue was over and a baleful shadow was cast across the stage at the beginning of the main act. For this act the setting was again the lake country, and the script at last called for action in a scene which at first glance might have been taken from Gulliver's Travels. Gulliver was the British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority- 'the Canadian entity,' in the language of the Treaty-which had been given a central but highly circumscribed role. It was to build three large dams and any other works essential to that task; and it was to make good any damage it might do to the land of Lilliput and compensate the inhabitants for any irreparable harm caused them; and that war all. The point in the analogy is that BC Hydro was indeed an actor playing from a script, a very specific and terse script, and its overall performance must be judged against the limitations of that script. It is necessary to say this not only to judge charges that Hydro should have done more than it did, but also to explain the circuitous course it had to take in attempting to transcend the limitations of the Treaty. It had long been recognized that the new reservoirs would play havoc with

26 People in the way the valley settlements and their communications, and these effects had been allowed for in terms of compensation ( that is, money for irreparable damage) or effective replacement ( for inundated roads) . However, little effective preparation seems to have been made in the early planning process for broader ameliorative action. When such possibilities did emerge in due course it was realized that Hydro had neither legal mandate nor assigned funds to implement them directly, no matter how desirable they might be. Nor could Hydro, a semi-independent agency outside the departmental structure of the British Columbia government, overlook the fact that most of the extra-curricular actions it might wish to see undertaken ( the building of access highways or the development of lakeside parks, for example) would fall within the jurisdiction of one or other of the established provincial departments. In short, the Authority was by no means a free agent in relation to the broader challenges of the Columbia River project. What were these challenges? In the first place, over 500 million dollars were to be spent on the project. 1 It is true that this total was to be spent at three widely separated points and over periods ranging from three to nine years. Nevertheless, the total was very considerable and Hydro's economists estimated in 1964 that an average of five million dollars a year would be spent in the Columbia region. (In the event this sum must have been closer to ten million.) Another measure, and one probably more meaningful for the Columbia region, was the work force to be employed. Peak employment and the approximate duration of the three dam projects were estimated in 1964 (Table 1). So much work could not be done and so many men housed, fed, and serviced, without a considerable amount rubbing off onto the region. And the first of the challenges was to maximize the rubbing off. Much of the rubbing off was obvious and to be expected, such as the incidental expenditures made by the workers on personal needs, recreation, gasoline, and so on. But much of it also consisted of deliberate decisions by Hydro to achieve its ends in ways which would best serve the surrounding communities. For example, development of new communities, assistance in the financing of a hospital extension at Castlegar, contribution to a community recreation hall at Duncan, and the preservation of a prized community ball park at Revelstoke were all decisions which left something permanent and useful in the region when Hydro's problem could have been solved in less constructive ways. Usually it was merely a matter of taking the humane and constructive alternative, and in general this was done. 1 This is not put forward as the 'cost' of the Columbia project, but merely as an order-of-magnitude figure to indicate the scale of the project and its impacts.

Enter Gulliver 27 TABLE 1 Dam

Construction period

Peak force (all tasks)

Camp forces

Duncan Arrow Mica

4 years 5 years 9 years (dam only)

700 1400 2000

400 300-500 2000

The second challenge, however, was different in that it demanded deliberate action by Hydro in areas beyond its Treaty responsibilities. Had it viewed its task through the single lens of the Columbia River Treaty it would, for example, have merely replaced inundated sections of road leaving the region with a patchwork of old and new roads. Such an approach would have been unimaginative and short-sighted for two reasons. First, the Arrow Lakes region was one of the most neglected in the province and badly needed better roads and communications. Second, it was anticipated that the new dams and lakes could become tourist magnets, as similar works had always proved to be in the United States, and would add a new element to the economy of the region and the province. But this situation could not materialize unless access roads were built and provisions, such as parks and campsites, were made for the accommodation of visitors. 2 Since such extra-curricular works were neither legally nor :financially within the competence of the Authority, it was necessary for Hydro, once its proposals had been sketched in outline, to seek co-operation from the provincial government. This part of the story is described in chapter 7. The point here is that these actions did constitute a reaching out beyond t!ie given and the mundane by Hydro. But beyond these two challenges there was, at least for those who could conceive it, a third - the human challenge. The condition of the Arrow Lakes settlements and the temper of their inhabitants in 1964 have already been described. It seemed clear to many that the valley was to be ruined, that nothing good could come out of the whole nefarious affair. It is true that the element of opportunity in the scheme had been pointed out by Dr H.L. Keenleyside, Hydro's chairman, in his public utterances in the region. But many people were in no mood for optimism. For those of humanistic temper there seemed to be an overriding task to be done: the task of re-energizing people, of helping to restore their faith in the future of the valley. Was this part of Hydro's philosophy, one of its avowed objectives? It was not. It is true that it could have been implied from 2 Nearly 60,000 visitors were recorded at the Arrow dam in 1966.

28 People in the way

Dr Keenleyside's speeches, although these were couched in hortatory rather than sympathetic terms. But nowhere in the official record will there be found such an aim, and for good reason. For one thing the people themselves would probably have received it with derision. For another, Hydro would probably have decided, as it did later in like circumstances, that such an explicit objective would be distorted, flung in its face and used against it. And in any event such an idea, spoken, would have been totally foreign to the English-Canadian temper. The whole situation militated against a stated objective of this kind. But the real problem lay much deeper. It is one thing to have visions and ideals for yourself; quite another to have them for others. In particular, how does a corporation set about helping people who are being dispossessed by its own actions, especially when there is quite a gap in attitudes and standards between the urban 'helpers' and the rural people to be helped? The situation is pregnant with possibilities of misunderstanding, of raw nerves and hamhanded idealism. Tom Joad pungently describes the recipient's view of that situation in The Grapes of Wrath: 'Doin' good to a fella that's down an' can't smack ya in the puss for it. That's preacbin' [22, p. 28).8 Was there then no possibility of such a concern being exercised? There was, of course, but it had to be expressed largely in doing the essential tasks with efficiency, patience, and understanding. Thus it fell largely to the Hydro field staff whose tasks brought them into personal contact with the people of the valley on their own ground. At this level, man could at least identify with man and only the most callous could be unaware of the stress which the displaced people were experiencing, even when that expressed itself in hostility or cynicism. li Hydro is judged to have emerged with credit from its exercise in the Arrow Lakes, it will be largely to the credit of its field men its appraisers, engineers, planners, and information officers - who did their difficult jobs, for the most part, with understanding and humanity. 3 Another comment on the menace of the altruistic zealot is made by Jon Gower Davies (11, p. 219]: 'men motivated by concern and love for fellow human beings are notoriously incapable of even listening to, let alone accepting, criticism. As H.G. Wells said of Beatrice Webb: "P.B.P., she boasted, was engraved inside their wedding rings, Pro Bono Publico, and she meant it to be no idle threat".'

5

Feeling the wind

I joined the staff of the BC Hydro and Power Authority in May 1964, assuming responsibility for the planning of the resettlement program. As soon as possible thereafter I set out for the Arrow Lakes to conduct a 'horseback survey.' The purpose of this was to assess for myself the overall situation as a basis for the resettlement program. I had by this time reviewed the available written material which Hydro had collected a few years earlier, and this provided a useful starting point. I called on all the people who held positions of trust and responsibility in their communities, on public officials and also on some of the known opponents of the Arrow project. I visited homes, read the local newspapers, walked the streets, drove on the back roads, and in effect tried to feel the situation and all its nuances for myself. It was, of course, a highly subjective, relatively unsystematic, exploratory process, which involved a considerable degree of personal excitement and stress as I tried to understand and to assess the meaning for Hydro of the mass of 'facts' and viewpoints which inundated me during the two-week period. 1 It was inevitably a risky process in that one could very easily come to false or naive conclusions. Admitting this, and 1 I was often reminded of the wry comment, attributed to an English physicist, that human knowledge is of two kinds: theories, which nobody believes except the men who formulated them, and facts, which everybody believes except the men who last investigated them. The truth of many situations in the Arrow Lakes, whether pre-Treaty or post-Treaty, is hard to establish. Without disrespect to any of my informants and collaborators it is necessary to say that not only do most of us see for ourselves only a very limited amount of 'the action' but we tend to see in it only what we want to see.

30 People in the way remembering also that the conclusions drawn from such an exploration should always be tentative and subject to review, the utility of such a reconnaissance cannot be over-emphasized. In any event I did get some feeling for the region and especially its people: who really counted and who did not; who was merely puffed up and noisy; who was at all representative; what the local concerns and differences were. In turn, some of them got to know me and took note of the fact that for the first time someone of some responsibility was asking them about their views and needs (before the Treaty was signed Hydro's surveyors and engineers could not be forthcoming with the local residents about their doings). The immediate result of this survey was a memorandum dated 14 July 1964 to the chairman of the Authority. Meaty and condensed as it is, it introduces in some fashion all the topics pursued in this book and is therefore reproduced in its entirety. THE BACKGROUND SITUATION IN THE ARROW LAKES

1 Local attitudes The local attitude varies from place to place depending on the anticipated impact of Hydro's works on the area. However, it can be said without any doubt that there is no basic hostility to the project or to Hydro although there is a great deal of apprehension as to the effect of the works on individual properties and lives. Furthermore, since this has been the case for at least four years, some people, especially older people, are obviously feeling acute strain, and all are nervous, suspicious, and an easy prey to rumour and emotional appeal. Hydro is not being blamed for this situation, which the people realize is nobody's fault, but the important thing is that they are reacting to the unknown. I am convinced that Hydro can easily dispel these attitudes if, in carrying out its programs, it adopts an outgoing, co-operative approach to the people, and in particular, keeps them fully informed of its programs and intentions.

Population types From Hydro's point of view the people of the Arrow Lakes can probably be divided into three broad categories. (a) Those who are self-supporting, mainly through employment with Celgar - often amplified by small-holding and treefarm operations. These consider themselves tied to the region and will probably resettle themselves spontaneously, given suitable compensation. ( b) Those who are not self-supporting, mainly older people and pensioners, who are often both indigent and ailing. Many of these are likely - as evidenced by a recent survey taken in the Edgewood area - to expect low-rent housing to be provided by Hydro. ( c) A small residual group containing other types, mainly true farmers and 2

Feeling the wind 31 'aesthetes' who have sought out the Arrow Lakes area for its special environmental qualities. Both of these groups seem to doubt that the future Arrow Lakes can supply their needs. In the first group especially there is widespread acceptance of the project as potentially beneficial and in any case inevitable, and there are signs of readiness to adjust to it, given the necessary leadership by Hydro. These people are almost all firmly rooted in the region because of their jobs, because of social or sentimental attachments, or because of the region's climate, which is widely appreciated. They know that the works will affect them considerably, and are naturally anxious about these effects, but many of them see clearly that it will be a richer, more stable, and less isolated place than before. This leads me to believe that except for a few requiring medical attention or unable to stand the strain of waiting and wondering any longer, almost all of the people displaced by flooding will wish to remain in the Arrow Lakes area. 3 Spontaneous resettlement I got the strong impression that those who are able will resettle themselves spontaneously, given certain conditions : (a) adequate compensation, to be settled as quickly as is humanly possible; (b) provision of substitute land, house-moving service, removal costs; (c) knowledge of new highway locations to guide their relocation decisions; (d) knowledge of Hydro's land 'take'; and (e) enough time so that they may establish new homes in stages, and in particular avail themselves of the 500-dollar winter building rebate. In view of the utter desirability of such initiative, everything possible should be done to create conditions encouraging spontaneous resettlement.

Compensation At the moment confusion and distrust centre around the subject of compensation. Some hold that Dr Keenleyside's recent statements on this subject are at odds with earlier statements by Mr Williston. Also I believe that our last statement has seemed contradictory and theoretical to the people, no matter how logical and sound it may have seemed to us. We talk about fairness, suggesting market values; they know very well that there has been no market for properties in the Arrow Lakes for years. We talk about a few special cases and exceptions to this general approach; they know that there are lots of them and are worried about them. Furthermore they have long memories of the Power Commission's opportunistic approach to the negotiation of line easements in the area, in which owners of similar properties received vastly different payments, depending on their alertness and toughness. The crucial question hanging over the region is 'What will I get for my property?' and it is crucial not only for the individual but also for Hydro because

4

32 People in the way (a) it will determine what people do for themselves in the way of resettlement and therefore, in reverse, what they will expect Hydro to do for them and (b) it will determine the whole atmosphere in which Hydro carries out its works whether against a background of satisfied people resettling themselves and cooperating actively, or against a background of hostility, obstructionism, jujitsu, and legal actions.2 I am convinced that this situation could be improved immediately, without prejudice to the appraisal program, if the Authority would publicize a general statement on compensation along the following lines: (a) that it is trying to determine, professionally, a fair value, not to obtain the best deal it can for itself; (b) that appraisers will not be empowered to bargain, although adjustments may be made if agreed by the Authority; (c) that removal and other justified resettlement expenses will normally be allowed; (d) that there are several ways of assessing value and that the most appropriate way, or ways, will be used in every case; (e)that Hydro is well aware of the effects of the last few years on property values in the Arrow Lakes area and will make allowance for them; (/)that in cases where market value of an old home is not enough to purchase another home Hydro will take steps to see that shelter is provided; and (g) that special care and accommodation will be provided for older people and those unable to look after themselves. It is an interesting sidelight on the question of compensation that the few prospective 'scalpers' in the area are well known and regarded with some amusement by their fellows. I take this as evidence that most of the people are both fair-minded and realistic. S Restitution J am convinced that by continuing to use the word 'compensation' we are blinding ourselves to our real problem. To express this as a proposition which everyone in the region would accept: no one should be worse off after flooding than before it. This definition suggests that we should be thinking in terms of restitution making good, restoring - rather than compensation, which is generally taken to mean money. This is especially important in the Arrow Lakes, firstly because many people are concerned about shelter, which they now have although compensation dollars may not enable them to replace it anew; secondly because in many cases dollar values will be difficult to determine and potentially contentious. I therefore suggest that we make a practice of distinguishing between the two 2 See for example, the Nelson Daily News, 25 June, regarding proposals by the Canadian Legion to provide legal aid for veterans so that they 'will not be at a disadvantage negotiating with trained (and presumably predatory) officials of BC Hydro.'

Feeling the wind 33 terms and preferably use restitution, which reminds us of our fundamental responsibility and of the several ways of discharging it - of which dollar compensation is only one. What does restitution imply in practical terms? 1 Since many people would have preferred to be left undisturbed, and a few probably profess the same while hoping for considerable improvement in their habitation, the basic approach should be one of substitution as far as possible: by making available equivalent parcels of land and by moving or being ready to move existing dwellings. 2 There will probably be some able-bodied people whose houses cannot be moved and who claim the right to an equivalent roof. Without attempting to be exhaustive I suggest three possible approaches to this problem: provision of houses acquired in cases of dollar compensation, provision of new houses on a rental basis, or provision of assistance in acquiring loans for private construction of new houses. 3 The older people who do not wish to be re-established as above should be offered specially-designed, low-rental accommodation, attached to the nearest community. (Incidentally these people need special reassurances as to the Authority's intentions, since they feel particularly vulnerable and apprehensive.) These proposals imply the following actions by Hydro: 1 Acquisition of land for 'residential' purposes within the region. Some of this will be acquired involuntarily in the process of buying severed parcels; some will have to be purchased in addition, especially in existing communities. Whether this action will extend to the building of so-called 'model communities' it is too early to say. 2 Provision of substitute farms, with the help of the BC department of Agriculture. This should not be a great task as the number involved will be small and those wishing to continue farming will be active and self-reliant. 3 Thorough investigation of house-moving techniques and movability appraisal. 4 An inventory of houses in the flood areas, which are capable of being moved, should be prepared. 5 The process of resettling old people will not be simple. First, their total needs must be broadly and sympathetically assessed (for example, their financial situation and medical needs). To tackle this we should use the social welfare and public health services in the region. The welfare case-workers know many of the people involved, and both the regional welfare administrators involved (Okanagan and Nelson) have expressed their willingness to cooperate with the Authority. Secondly, even when the need is clear, many older people may require demonstration and persuasion to settle in group housing. This implies a program of films and visits (for example, to the Kam-

34 People in the way loops housing project), which could be undertaken by the information services group in conjunction with the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation and the University of British Columbia's extension department. 6 Critical land operations The steps suggested above apply primarily to the Central Arrow Lakes area, where the bulk of the flooding will take place. However, there are two critical areas in which Hydro should concern itself with land acquisition and development, namely Revelstoke and Castlegar. In relation to the size of the community, and local topography, the amount of flooding in the Revelstoke area will be considerable. The people involved will probably wish to resettle locally and will cause a considerable demand for land in an area which is already burgeoning with motel construction under the impact of the Rogers Pass highway and which may be due for a bout of land speculation, if that is not already happening. Hydro has a serious interest in this situation. First, it cannot expose itself to any charge that it purchased property at pre-Columbia values and then left the people to purchase land at post-Columbia prices inflated by its own actions; secondly it should not, for its own sake, pay inflated prices and thus promote inflation. The obvious solution is for Hydro to acquire land for its own restitution purposes. If these lands are strategically located and proper arrangements made with the city for services, this could mitigate inflation, exonerate Hydro, and also promote efficient, good quality growth in Revelstoke. In Castlegar the situation is even more critical, although Hydro is not directly involved in the municipal areas. Our plans envisage the employment at the dam site, only four miles from the town, of a peak work force of 1400 men, of whom 900 to 1100 are not expected to be accommodated in construction camps. This presumably does not take any account of supply, service, and other secondary workers who will come in to support the construction forces. But allowing only for the families of the primary workers, we can envisage an influx of 3000 people into an area whose total population is now only about 2500; and a demand for 1000 living units in a community whose total excess capacity at the moment has been estimated as 75 units. Clearly Hydro cannot stand aloof from this problem and its contribution can probably be made best by direct participation in the land market.

1 Community plans One factor of some significance for Hydro is the condition of local government in the Arrow Lakes. This consists only of the city of Revelstoke and the villages of Castlegar and Kinnaird, the rest being unorganized - although Nakusp may soon decide to become a village. All of these are small and served by non-professional, general-factotum staffs; and they are bedevilled by the existence of

Feeling the wind 35 fragmented boundaries, all having unorganized fringes around them, Castlegar being further complicated by the presence of two bickering village councils. Where there is no organized government, as in Nakusp, communal problems are met by ad hoc societies or boards. In all of the three major communities - Revelstoke, Nakusp, and Castlegar Hydro will inevitably be involved either in works within the community or in negotiations over the effect of its operations on local services and facilities. In either event it is imperative, whether to look after its own interests competently or to deal fairly with community claims, that Hydro should know precisely how its works affect the community and what it should do about these effects. Also, it is desirable that the local councils - and other statutory bodies, such as school and hospital boards - should act as responsibly as possible in matters which affect Hydro. (To cite one example, the village of Kinnaird completely bans trailers within its area.) I believe that the interests of Hydro and the communities can best be served if Hydro encourages the preparation of comprehensive plans for the affected communities. Yet it should not infringe or appear to infringe on those communities' autonomy by advising them itself; and equally it should be in a position to uphold its own rights in any argument with the community. These considerations suggest that Hydro should offer to assist these communities by contributing substantially to the employment of independent planning consultants. These consultants would be instructed to prepare plans for the development of the whole community, to be presented to both Hydro and the councils concerned. In order to achieve full impact - for absorption of ideas and experience by councils is slow, and implementation of plans takes years the consultant should be retained, probably throughout the construction period, to assist with implementation of the plan once it is prepared. All this raises a general question of some importance to Hydro since it will clearly be bombarded with requests and proposals for help and involvement: 'What is Hydro going to do for the communities it affects?' I suggest that in the first place Hydro answer this with a principle: 'Hydro will not do for any community what it ought to be doing for itself, but it will make good any damage it causes; it will contribute generously where its operations will clearly affect community facilities or the community's ability to support these facilities; and it will, where necessary, help the community to help itself by insuring that it gets com• petent and impartial advice.' This principle, which was adopted very successfully by TVA, will make the communities stand on their own feet, improve their ability to govern themselves, and at the same time provide a reasonable community environment for Hydro to work in. 8 Area prospects The Treaty works will trigger immense changes which will necessitate readjust-

36 People in the way ments on the part of individual citizens, organizations which carry out community undertakings - municipalities, school boards, hospital boards, cemetery boards, recreation commissions, etc. - and major employers such as Celgar and the CPR. At the moment only Hydro, as the initiator, is in a position to estimate what the prime changes will be, such as: increases in population through the influx of construction and supporting forces; redistribution of population as a result of flooding; local economic opportunities presented by Hydro's operations; longterm economic changes and opportunities, including tourism and recreation, caused by the improvement in highway communications. For many reasons - for its own information, for the guidance of other bodies serving the region, and as a matter of constructive public relations - I suggest that Hydro arrange for studies of the economic and population outlook for the region, and that it seek the co-operation of major employers such as Celgar and the CPR in doing so. These studies should then be widely distributed throughout the region as part of Hydro's public information program. 9 Public information program In my view the greatest need at the moment is to broaden the public information program now under way. This is necessary both to gain the confidence and cooperation of the people and thus give us a favourable environment for our works, and to enable them to relocate themselves and thus minimize our need to do things for them. Also, if carried at the grass roots, it holds a further potential benefit to Hydro, namely feedback of local intelligence, enabling us to deal more sensitively with local feelings and often to anticipate them. As I see it this program should: (a) operate at the grass-roots level in / ormal co-operation with the engineering, planning, and appraisal functions; ( b) involve regular and direct dissemination of information to local residents; ( c) provide a local intelligence service to Hydro's staff; (d) undertake public presentations and discussions of Hydro plans; (e) undertake specific educational and demonstration programs, such as those connected with resettlement of old people. It is my feeling that for obvious reasons beyond its control prior to the signing of the Treaty, Hydro has often been or has appeared to be on the defensive. It has therefore invited suspicion and attack. The only way to change this image is to be as outgoing and co-operative as possible. The need is to establish the people's confidence in Hydro as a constructive force in their lives, and as a real, visible force at their own level. I have not the slightest doubt that this can be done and that it could - to put it in money terms - save Hydro millions of dollars.

10 Clearing In view of current suggestions that, while clearing all merchantable timber below the flood line in the Arrow Lakes, we leave the balance for a five-year period

Feeling the wind 37 after flooding to see what Nature will do for us, free, I feel impelled to make the following observations: 1 The Arrow Lakes are 'working' lakes and will be even more so after flooding. They are heavily used, especially by Celgar, and it is expected that they will be increasingly used for ·pleasure boating and fishing in future. 2 The Arrow Lakes area bas a relatively mild climate and bas frozen over (in the Nakusp area, at least) only twice in the last sixteen years. Since natural clearing depends on ice action, the outlook for effective natural clearing seems slight. 3 For the first few years after completion of the dam the Arrow Lakes will undoubtedly be a magnet for tourists. It would be fatal to the region's image if during these years it presented a dead-forest appearance or were plugged with debris. 4 As a result of the Authority's statements to date every one I met expects the Arrow Lakes to be 'cleared,' that is, completely. Any modifying proposal would be regarded as a gross breach of faith. 5 I feel that, of all the lakes concerned in the Treaty, the Arrow Lakes are not the place to 'take a chance,' especially when the odds are not favourable. I am aware of the thought that the proposal might save the Authority 'millions of dollars'; on the other band I believe there are weighty reasons for doubting both the practicality and the wisdom of the proposal. I therefore suggest that very serious study be given to clearing in the Arrow Lakes before a final decision is made. 11 Recreation Since there are few established recreational facilities on the Arrow Lakes now, presumably Hydro has little responsibility for restitution. The Arrow Lakes may experience considerable growth in recreational use. The Kootenay Lakes are said to be dangerous and 'not popular'; the Okanagan is 'too popular'; while the Arrow Lakes will become more accessible and better known. It seems also that due to local topography, there are several areas of outstanding micro-climate and shelter characteristics on the Arrow Lakes Deer Park, Renata, and Nakusp for example. It seems that the Castlegar-Renata area is considerably used and highly regarded by the people of the Castlegar-Trail-Nelson complex, thus accounting for at least part of (local MLA) Brothers' insistence (which appears to be accepted as gospel in that area) on the maintenance of a road to Deer Park. Having visited them, I feel that the post-flooding sites at both Renata and Deer Park, though limited in size, will be exceptionally good for recreational use, and the question of maintaining an access road - difficult and costly as it will undoubtedly be should not be decided on grounds of economy only.

38 People in the way The careful reader will have noted a considerable difference between the historical situation sketched in chapter 3 and the assessment of local attitudes presented in this report. He will therefore not be surprised to know that when I wrote the latter I did not know the history of the local hearings. Had I known it I might have been rather less sanguine about the human relations aspect of the program. For all its shortcomings and its rather ingenuous optimism this report gave rise to many useful actions. Several of these could be classified as exercises in communication: the Property Owner's Guide (chapter 6), economic impact studies, and The Columbia Newsletter, which was mailed to every householder in the area and ran through thirty issues between August 1964 and June 1969. Another action with a large element of communication in it was the decision to hire independent planning consultants for Revelstoke, Nakusp, and Castlegar. This seems to have been quite useful. Perhaps one result, although it is impossible to document, was that Hydro had relatively little trouble from these communities. I like to think, however, that the cause of competent self-government was advanced a little by the efforts of these conscientious consultants. Certainly one thing cannot be denied, namely their independence. In this respect the Revelstoke case proved embarrassing both to Hydro and to me. The consultant there, a friend of my own and one of the world's most stubborn people, concluded that Hydro ought to construct a low dam across the Columbia near Arrowhead in order to maintain a lake rather than a widely fluctuating river in front of Revelstoke. Hydro's engineers blew their fuses. This would have necessitated a dam a mile long; would have further raised the flood level at Revelstoke where Hydro was already having a worrying time with dikes and a railway bridge; and according to our engineers would have altered water levels to the point of necessitating re-approval by the u.s. government. Needless to say the dam was never built. The report also precipitated local land acquisition and development programs ( chapter 7) ; plans for provincial recreation areas ( chapter 7) ; and the tree-clearing controversy, which had a history of its own (chapter 11). The comments on compensation were received by the appropriate officers with something less than bubbling enthusiasm. Nevertheless they presaged very clearly some of the conflicts and problems which arose later ( chapters 6 and 15) . For all the dangers inherent in superficiality, this broadbrush treatment of the Arrow Lakes seems in retrospect to have been useful and productive. Most of all it pointed out, and suggested specific means of dealing with, the inevitable relationships between the Columbia project and the people and institutions of the Arrow Lakes country. Equally important and no less

Feeling the wind 39 complex it pointed out working relationships both within Hydro and between it and the provincial government which deserved attention. For me the immediate result of this survey was a sense of direction which was reflected in the planning program from that point on. Secondly, it resulted in the establishment of a small planning office in Nakusp. This was a one-man show for the first winter, but was amplified by the employment of three short-term people for the following summer. 3 Their instructions were to get to know intimately the people and the land and to prepare plans and programs for the resettlement of those wishing to stay in the region. In the event they provided planning, public relations, and intelligence functions which served Hydro well. Many months were to pass before most of the suggestions made in the report would materialize. However, one over-riding question demanded early attention by the Authority. That was the question of compensation principles, to which we now tum. 3 Without intruding on the course of the story I should acknowledge the sterling work done by the 'one-man show,' Gerry Fitzpatrick. A young man of quite unusual common sense and integrity, Gerry braved the psychological frigidity of the first winter, while his wife collected bruises on her hips as she learned to live with two lively sons in a tiny trailer. Perhaps they and the three young men who supported them the next summer all benefitted in that they, like me, were not 'regular' Hydro employees. Thus, they came with open eyes and no worries about status, promotion, or hierarchy to distort their views of the situations they were called on to assess. In their quiet way, they performed a very valuable function and did it well.

6

The root of all evil?

Undoubtedly the issue of greatest consequence to the individuals affected, and therefore the touchiest job facing Hydro, was the acquisition of properties located below the reservoir flood line. This was not only a task of considerable size (about 1300 properties were involved1, but one which governed the timing of several stages of the Columbia project. Properties on the dam site had to be acquired immediately and land on the reservoir floor had to be purchased before clearing operations could be carried out. In addition, homes affected had to be bought so that their owners would know how much capital they had to invest in new homes, for this would govern their ability to co-operate with Hydro in resettlement planning. Furthermore, people could be expected to be fractious until they knew. For both sides, therefore, timely acquisition of property was crucial. From Hydro's point of view much more was at stake than just the expediting of other parts of the project. In one sense Hydro's reputation and the image of the provincial government hung on this program. The actual conduct of the operation, a far bigger task than Hydro or its progenitors had undertaken before, was therefore a very serious administrative responsibility. The first question, since Hydro had only a small land staff, was whether it should be an 'inside' or an 'outside' job. Contract appraisals were not unknown and some of the large real estate and appraisal firms would have 1 1280 ownerships (3200 parcels of land) and 71 flowage easements. This involved about 2000 people, including 615 households, of which 260 were on farmsteads or small ranches. The land area was 33,500 acres, of which 9000 acres was Crown land.

The root of all evil? 41 been delighted to be commissioned. However Hydro thought it would lose control of a very sensitive operation if it depended on others for this work. It was probably true that the job could be blitzed; but at what cost to all concerned? The first decision therefore was that Hydro should do the job itself. This was only the beginning. Staff had to be found from all over the country, for suitable people were scarce; they then had to be scrutinized, checked, and briefed on their responsibilities. Workable arrangements had to be hammered out for liaison between the field staff, - who knew the realities of each case, and the back-up staff at head office in Vancouver, who held the ultimate responsibility for approving offers. Before long it became necessary to shift some responsibilities and discretionary powers to the field office in order to expedite the operation. Inevitably there were problems. The whole process took time. The program seemed to crawl along in the early days and took many months to get into high gear. There were a few mistakes in staffing. One veteran employee proved rather abrasive and had to be retired. Another took his own life after becoming improperly involved in contract administration. Since he was a man of great drive and energy, this was a grave setback to the property acquisition program, for which he was responsible in the field. But judging by some of the comments made in the 1970 survey his case had an even more serious effect on Hydro's image. To right the balance however, it is only fair to point out that in the opinion of the Vancouver press representatives who visited the region in 1966 Hydro's field men were generally respected. Furthermore those who had direct knowledge of their work, especially in the early days when the situation was rather tense and the few available men were under gr~at pressure, testify to the devotion and endurance of the first staff members.! They worked from early morning until long after dark, writing reports in lonely hotel rooms and doing what most people would regard as a thankless task with remarkable fortitude. Nor was this always done without personal cost. Friends of the employee who took his own life have told how he was often physically sick at the end of the day as a result of emotional strain. So much for the vampire image. As far as the job itself was concerned the general character of the Arrow Lakes country and its houses has already been described. But one thing more needs to be said: there had been no effective market for property in the Arrow Lakes for many years. Thus the mainstay of the appraiser's normal approach, demonstrable market value, was non-existent in the Central Arrow Lakes and had to be sought in nearby areas. Communal property was another problem. There was a minimum of

42 People in the way formal organization in the Arrow Lakes. None of the communities were then incorporated, nor were their cemetery boards, or community hall boards. Thus in a legal sense Hydro had frequently no 'party' to deal with, and it should be said it took no advantage of that. In addition communal works, for example community halls or water systems, had often been the product of volunteer labour without benefit of niceties such as drawn plans, which meant of course that there were no records. Not that these situations lacked humour. Hydro's staff still recall fondly the appraisal of one venerable community hall. One of the appraiser's standard items was 'sanitary facilities.' In this case the answer was 'indoor outhouse,' a very proper description for a very proper six-holer. One basic step taken at the beginning was a background study of conditions and land values in the adjacent Kootenay, Okanagan, and Slocan valleys. It was not pretended that conditions in any of these valleys were precisely similar to those in the Arrow Lakes, but they did present a reasonable range of situations into which some of the displaced people might be moving and of property values they might face. When this was announced (Columbia Newsletter, No 1, August 1964) it was acknowledged that the Arrow Lakes had been under threat of flooding for many years and it was stated that allowance would be made for this. A second step was the publication in September 1964 of The Property Owners' Guide (reproduced in Appendix 1) and its distribution to all householders. This booklet was an attempt by Hydro to outline the property acquisition process, and to reassure people by giving them some idea of how they would be treated. This idea had not been received with enthusiasm by all members of Hydro's staff. There were those who felt it unwise to commit themselves to print, believing, not without reason, that anything they might say would be used against them. And laudable as it was as an exercise in open communication the Guide foreshadowed at least a couple of problems. The first lay in Hydro's insistence that it would change an offer only 'if discussions ... show that some element of value was overlooked or that we erred in some other way,' at the same time refusing to present the breakdown of its offers. This could be interpreted only to mean that Hydro, not being willing to give a detailed statement but being willing to 'discuss' the situation, would only enter into a party-type guessing game with the property owner in which he would ask questions and the Hydro representative would answer only yes or no. In fact, Hydro officials admitted that if an owner was smart he could find out substantially what allowances had been made, a very disturbing admission in light of the fact that people concerned were by and large simple people, not skilled in matters of real estate or the art of cross examination. The second problem lay in the semantic fog produced by the concurrent

The root of all evil? 43 use of three key words. Hydro would 'discuss' and it would 'negotiate' but it would not 'bargain.' Quite apart from the tendency of these words to overlap in meaning, in common usage there was the simple fact that, whatever words were used to describe it, a process of accommodation took place whereby Hydro and a property owner reached agreement. Was the process 'discussion,' 'negotiation,' 'bargaining' ( which is after all not necessarily a sinister process), or a miraculous kind of silent osmosis? Or was it 'bargaining' if the owner proposed the idea, but 'discussion' if the Hydro representative did? The people affected clearly couldn't care less what the word was. Call it, if you will, the 'non-bargaining process', it amounted to the same thing in the end. These preparations, however, merely set the stage for the long, piece-bypiece process of inspecting, appraising, negotiating, and acquiring property. The process was a play in itself, lacking neither incident nor drama. The first player on the scene was Dr Hugh Keenleyside, who very shortly after the ratification of the Treaty felt that he, as Hydro chairman, should appear in person in the Arrow Lakes. His message was one of reassurance combined with sternness. He used the words he had employed when defending the Treaty in Ottawa, the only kind of language anyone could possibly use at that stage, 'fair and generous.' Having said this he went on to make it clear that Hydro had no intention of acceding to unreasonable demands, apparently a shot across the bows of certain American speculators. The difficulty was that terms like 'fair,' 'generous,' and 'unreasonable' could be interpreted in Humpty Dumpty's words: 'When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean.' The inhabitants talked of replacement regardless of circumstances ('a roof for a roof') while Hydro talked of value as a market concept and therefore strictly related to time and place. The first viewpoint was well illustrated at the first meeting addressed by Dr Keenleyside at Needles when he was pressed for a specific assurance that lakefront land would be valued at the same front-foot price as in the Okanagan Valley. From the questioner's viewpoint the paramount consideration was replacement; from Hydro's the question had to be judged in light of the fact that the Okanagan was more populous, more accessible, more productive, drier, blessed with warmer water, and several hours' driving time closer to Vancouver. But it was not merely that two very different views could be brought to bear on the question of value that made property appraisal a difficult task. The circumstances of the task made it doubly touchy. It was often impossible for inspections to be made privately. 2 Neighbours usually got to know. In2 It may also be pointed out that the telephone system, a euphemism at that time, featured party lines and (very) human operators.

44 People in the way evitably comparisons were made, valid or not. And even if the property owner kept his own counsel, that did not prevent the rumour mill from grinding out its own versions of the 'deal.' Occasionally a case would even pop up outside the region, like one which occasioned the following item by Hydro in Columbia Newsletter, No 11, 7 June 1966. NEWSPAPER STATEMENT INCORRECT

We'd like to set the record straight concerning the purchase of a 100-acre dairy farm from James McKinnon, Revelstoke. A story originating in the Vancouver Sun stated that BC Hydro originally offered Mr McKinnon $100,000 for his dairy business and later raised the offer to $227,000. No offer of $100,000 or any amount close to that figure was ever made to Mr McKinnon. Discussions leading to purchase of his property were completed within a 24-hour period and the original offer by Hydro was very close to the amount actually paid for the property. We are concerned about the erroneous publicity because of the disturbing impact it could have on property owners whose properties have not yet been purchased.

At this time, in fact, rumours and editorial criticism were so widespread that Hydro wrote an editorial in the same Newsletter. We are concerned about the publicity appearing in a number of newspapers criticizing the job that Hydro is doing. Some of the criticism has been justified and we welcome it, but a large part of it has been based on misinformation, misunderstanding and exaggeration. The result is an extremely distorted picture of the situation. This matter is of grave concern to us because it imposes even greater anxiety on the property owners still waiting to reach an agreement with us. Their position has been difficult enough without this added burden. Of the 1300 property holdings affected by three projects, more than 800 have already been purchased. We know from direct contact with them that the great majority of these property owners have been satisfied with the settlements we have reached with them. We urge those property owners still waiting to reach a settlement with us to keep an open mind, to view the repeated criticisms by a few people with reservation, and to judge the situation for themselves when they have had personal experience with our field representatives.

One contributor to the boiling of the compensation pot was H.W. Herridge, the member of parliament for the Arrow Lakes, who was still fighting the

The root of all evil? 45 project tooth and nail. It was to be expected that the region's political representatives would try to ensure the best possible treatment for their constituents, but in Hydro's view Herridge's tactics were irresponsible and likely to raise false hopes and unnecessary animosities. On July 3 1964, for example, he entered an item in the Arrow Lakes News, inviting comparison between property values in the Arrow Lakes and the environs of Ottawa, as if the two regions were remotely comparable in terms of population, growth rate, or property market activity. By contrast the local politician who emerged with reputation enhanced was Randolph Harding (NDP), then incumbent in the Kaslo-Slocan provincial riding and later member of parliament for the federal riding. Harding fought for his consitituents regardless of their political allegiance; he questioned, needled, and harassed the government in the legislature; and he interceded directly with Hydro on behalf of his constituents, quietly and effectively, with dignity and responsibility. Despite his status as a highly critical member of the opposition. Harding gained Hydro's respect and admiration. But value appraisal was in many cases only the beginning of the job for Hydro. For example, some of the displaced people receiving welfare payments lived in their own homes, and although many of these were small, old, and decrepit, their appraised value might amount to thousands of dollars. Provincial welfare regulations were such that the receipt of any substantial capital sum would automatically disqualify the recipient for welfare payments until he was again reduced to a state of need. Even more serious for many, such disqualification would automatically cut the recipient off from medical benefits. In such a case routine payment of compensation would have wrought considerable distress upon individuals, and damaged Hydro's image. On becoming aware of this danger Hydro took the matter up with the welfare authorities and it was arranged that a period of grace would be allowed, long enough for the recipient to find a new house. A somewhat similar situation could have arisen from the fact that the whole process of inspection, appraisal, checking, discussion, and acceptance often took quite some time to complete. During this time people frequently required cash to buy or put a down-payment on a new property. In such cases once the general level of the compensation was clear Hydro arranged to make a substantial proportion of it available in advance of final settlement. Not a big thing to be sure, but an indication that Hydro was not a soul-less monster. Despite the story told in chapter 12 Hydro did take special care of old and needy people. Among other things it employed a fatherly retired civil

46 People in the way servant, William MacGillivray, to look after them. One of his main tasks was to help find them new homes and to do this he drove them on many long journeys into neighbouring towns and valleys.3 Hydro believes that no older person displaced by the Columbia River project lacked a comfortable home. One of the most imaginative steps taken by Hydro was the appointment of an 'ombudsman' or, more formally, a special commissioner, for the Columbia project. This was the brainchild of Dr Keenleyside, who at the same time realized that his proposal would need very careful implementation if its objectives were to be fully realized. The facts of the matter and reasons for it were set out in the Columbia Newsletter, No 5, 19 February 1965. We are grateful to Chief Justice J.O. Wilson of the Supreme Court of British Columbia for selecting Judge M.M. Colquhoun for the important role of Special Commissioner for the Columbia projects. Over 2000 people will have to move as a result of the construction of the three Columbia Treaty dams. We have promised these people that they will be treated fairly and generously. So far the program has been working remarkably well, but we realize it is always possible that a mistake may be made or that some people may feel that they have been unjustly treated. That's why we asked Chief Justice Wilson to select a distinguished citizen to act as a kind of referee to hear complaints and to advise us as to actions we should take. The terms of reference for the Special Commissioner (which have been approved by the Chief Justice) are: 1 On request the Special Commissioner will advise persons whose rights or interests are to be affected as to the proper representations to be made and the proper course of action to pursue before or during the process of negotiations for purchase by the Authority. 2 When asked to do so by the Authority, or by a person affected, the Special Commissioner will present to the Authority such considerations as may appear to him to affect any rights or interests of the person concerned. 3 The recommendations of the Special Commissioner are to be made only for the help of the individual affected and the guidance of the Hydro and, if a process of compulsory acquisition follows, will not be acceptable as evidence. 4 The Special Commissioner will normally examine complaints in relation to the Hydro's financial offers only in those instances in which the complainant has reason to believe that some significant aspect of his case has been overlooked by the Hydro officers who have made the proposal. 3 MacGillivray's work was appreciatively mentioned by several people in the 1970 survey ( chapter 14).

The root of all evil? 47 5 The services of the Special Commissioner will be rendered free to the persons who request them.

Behind the manner of this appointment lay the realization that at the time winter 1964-5 when relatively few property settlements had been completed and tension was rising - such an offer might be regarded as a spurious PR gimmick. To be taken seriously it had to bear the stamp of impeccable impartiality. This led the chairman to approach the chief justice of British Columbia, who suggested Judge Colquhoun for the post as well as concurring in his terms of reference. It would scarcely be surprising if, nevertheless, the people of the Arrow Lakes were suspicious of this move at the time. I well remember the reply given me when I asked one of the Hydro field staff how he thought the special commissioner was viewed by the people. 'Oh,' he said, 'they think he's just a Hydro pussycat,' his meaning being as clear as his metaphor was odd. Nevertheless the Judge heard fifty-five cases in all and in every case Hydro accepted his recommendation, which was invariably on the side of generosity. The evidence cited so far suggests that Hydro of its own volition did many humane acts to ease the plight of those it uprooted. However, as corroboration it may be worthwhile to add here accounts of the Arrow Lakes scene by Tom Hazlitt, a critical young reporter for the Vancouver Province:' The first, written on 2 July 1964, gives a good view of the problem and the atmosphere which confronted Hydro at the start of its work. ARROW FOLK IN QUANDARY

How much is home worth? In the valley of the Arrow Lakes the cold, precise laws of economics have always been an enemy. And now those same laws are about to dictate a dramatic end to a way of life. Two thousand people are caught in a classic conflict. On one side: the dam and shattering attendant developments which the majority of law-makers have found desirable, necessary and profitable. On the other side is a manner of living which may be slow and inefficient. But it is a life in which most residents have a vested interest and which many honestly prefer. 4 Frank Rutter writing for the Vancouver Sun about the same time in 1966 reported in much the same terms as Hazlitt, but in order to avoid tedious repetition his articles are not reproduced here.

48 People in the way It is only in the past few weeks that the truth has begun to sink in that the old days are truly gone. And only now are people realizing that while some of them will profit, a great number will be hurt.

BC pledge Throughout the long negotiation of the Columbia River Treaty, officials of the BC Government and BC Hydro have repeated one theme concerning the people who will be displaced. Dr Hugh Keenleyside, co-chairman of BC Hydro, has said repeatedly the people will be treated fairly, sympathetically and generously. He has also said that special help will be made available to old people to assist them in re-establishment. There will be no formula, but each case will be settled on its merits, with due attention paid to intangibles like sentimental attachments, years of toil, employment, and income. Spelled out There seems no doubt but that these principles will be honestly and humanely applied. But the tragedy lies in the fact that these promises have come to mean one thing to the politicians and administrators responsible and quite another to the farmers, loggers and old-timers who will be flooded out. Rightly or wrongly, many people of the Arrow Lakes have come to believe they will receive what they term full replacement compensation. Under this line of reasoning, a man who owns outright a six room house, a couple of barns, 30 acres of land and a bit of waterfront should be moved to a similar holding or given enough money to establish himself in the same fashion. This is definitely not the case. In the past week or so, the property owners affected have received letters setting forth the true state of affairs. The letter, signed by Dr Keenleyside, says representatives of BC Hydro's land division will determine the fair market value of each parcel of land involved, then will make offers of purchase to the owners.

One case It has not escaped the Arrow residents that fair market value and so-called

replacement value are two very different things. In fact, land and buildings which are about to be flooded have no market value, fair or otherwise. However, a fair estimate of value can be made by taking the tax assessment, comparing land sales in adjacent areas, and adding something for the intangible called 'special value to owner.' In the view of BC Hydro officials, this treatment is fair and equitable, and certainly in line with expropriation procedures in Canada. But in the view of many property owners it is a disaster.

The root of all evil? 49 Take the case of Nick Makarewicz, father of six, a ferry operator by day and a farmer the rest of the time. For his regular eight-hour shift he gets an average salary. He works hard, all members of his family work hard, but the rewards are high. He walks to work and puts his car money into tractors and equipment. He never buys milk, eggs, beef or vegetables, which most people figure results in a saving of $500 per year, for eight people, or $4,000. He sells beef cattle and timber. Others' problems In city or town Nick Makarewicz would be fortunate to make $100 a week, assuming he could find a job. But in his own private empire he lives like a king on prime waterfront property, has no security problem, and figured on putting all six children through university. Because of his zeal in putting the farm in shape, Makarewicz will probably get higher compensation than most, but his chances of building a comparable life with the proceeds are slim. It could be argued that the Makarewicz dilemma is a special case. BC Hydro officials are fond of saying that the majority of farms are marginal operations and many, in fact, are not farms at all but residences, the owners of which have long since given up farming for more lucrative work in the woods and mills. Real values

This is quite true. Many of the farms are run down and neglected, and many of the residents do earn a good living, often on the payroll of the Celgar logging division. But it does not necessarily follow that they are just itching to trade the old family spread for a crowded duplex in town. There are advantages to living on a marginal farm. For one thing it is paid for, and until recently the practice of going into debt has been considered one of the more serious forms of sin in the Arrow Lakes. The barns may be falling down and the whole thing needs a coat of paint, but many of these people consider themselves proprietors of country estates. Kids have horses of their own and enough wood to cut to keep them out of trouble. The proceeds of the farm operation may be small in terms of cash, but this is an isolated valley and a lively barter economy keeps living standards high. Mrs Jones makes good butter which she trades with Mrs Smith, who has an orchard, and both deal with Mrs Black, whose eggs taste wonderful. This sort of thing has little market value, but it stretches the pay cheque. The so-called marginal farmers of the valley are quick to claim that their farms are uneconomic rather than unproductive. Residents also claim that their district has been deliberately depressed with a view to just the kind of deal now shaping up.

50 People in the way On balance, it appears the residents of Arrow Lakes will get fair compensation and fair treatment. But the way of life - independence, privacy, the ripple of water on the lake and the colt in the far pasture - these things are dead, and there will be many who mourn their passing.

On 16 May 1966 Hazlitt was writing again. TWO-FISTED FOLKS ARE HARD TO UPROOT

Clouds of smoke hang heavy over the beautiful valley of the Arrow Lakes, where more changes have occurred in the last six months than in the past hundred years. Most of the smoke comes from slash clearings along the lakeshore, where all night long, men with bulldozers feed bonfires as part of a giant clean-up job. But some of it comes from the remains of houses and barns, where in some cases the hopes and hard work of generations are put to the torch in fiery sacrifice to the god called progress. Today the battle lines are drawn. The people are on the move, and the blue staff cars and trucks of BC Hydro move through the old townsites like warrior ants in search of prey. Although rumours fly thick and fast in the Arrow Lakes country, it is difficult to find bona fide cases of hardship or bureaucratic mismanagement. Hydro officials admit that in the mammoth job of uprooting a whole countryside - a countryside inhabited largely by two-fisted individualists - some mistakes have been made. But, they insist, the rule books have been stretched on occasion to rectify these, and the bulk of displaced persons are satisfied. In the offices of BC Hydro here in Nakusp, one hears a story of orderly negotiations and sound business practice not untouched by the qualities of mercy and imagination. But in the beer parlors, the quiet side roads and back kitchens of the country people, things are quite different. Charge and counter-charge echo back and forth with the same persistence and frequency as the steamboat whistles of a generation ago. From this welter of conversation - some of it pretty wild - there emerges a pattern of legitimate complaint.

On 17 May: THERE WILL BE BLOODSHED: HYDRO 'GANGSTERS'

'It's this scorched earth policy that frightens people. It's getting worse every day - homes burning, and old widow ladies standing out in the snow watching their belongings go up. Somebody's going to get hurt one day, and then there will be bloodshed in this valley on top of everything else.'

The root of all evil? 51 The speak.er was a bespectacled farmer-logger, apparently in his right mind and apparently well-informed. 'I tell you,' he went on, 'I tell you those Hydro land agents aren't anything of the sort. Gangsters, they are, specially imported gangsters and black-mailers to boot.' The conversation is extreme, but typical of the endless talk one encounters in the more remote sections of the Arrow Lakes. It goes on and on, one shocking 'fact' piled on top of another with obvious sincerity. A non-critical tourist fr9m Calgary or California would come away convinced that the darkest deeds of the Middle Ages are being perpetrated wholesale on the long-suffering citizenry. A reporter checking rumours of bureaucratic mismanagement quickly fills a notebook with such 'facts,' but must then check back laboriously to find out what really happened. There is usually a grain of truth, explainable in itself, but built to magnificent proportions as the story passes from one pocket of habitation to another in an area where communication is still in an undeveloped state. The really wild rumours move like the wind of the Arrow Lakes, which is fast and unpredictable. But under the wild talk there are serious complaints, put forward quietly by responsible people. Basically, these are the causes of trouble as Hydro officials go about their land-assembly task: - There is a deliberate lack of any announced yardstick in figuring property values. - Property owners can cite what appear to be scores of inconsistencies in settlements already reached. - Property owners claim Hydro uses time a a bargaining agent, on the theory that the big Crown corporation can afford to wait it out much easier than a small farmer or logger who has to find a new place in which to earn a living. - The so-called scorched earth policy is a fact in some places where Hydro officials consider it dangerous or unwise to leave an empty house on its newlyacquired property. - Hydro officials refuse to disclose the basis on which they make offers. This last item is the cause of more trouble than all the rest put together. For example, the land agent will say that an offer of $10,000 is based on the price of land, house, buildings, waterfront and the disturbance factor. But he won't tie down the cost of any separate item. Residents say this is unfair and leaves them completely in the dark as to what their values are. It also removes an ingredient of comparison on the cost applied to barns

52 People in the way and the like, although the Arrow Lakes people compare virtually everything that happens. The property owners claim Lands Minister Williston promised them that this practice would cease, but nothing has happened yet. However, the much-maligned Hydro officials have their own side of the story, and this will be presented in the next article.

And finally on 19 May: In the brand new offices of BC Hydro - well above floodline - there is a special room lined with maps and well filled with card indexes and filing cabinets. This is the land department, where the financial fate of thousands of Arrow Lakes residents is weighted and measured. To bear some residents talk, you would think this a star chamber set-up inhabited by parsimonious officials determined to pay the least possible compensation for valuable land and buildings. What actually goes on here? How do the Hydro land agents go about setting a price on homesteads which vary from wheezy old mansions to log buts, and farmland that runs the gamut from highly productive orchard to poverty stricken acres suitable only for the production of boulders? The first step is the appraisal, which takes the form of a bulky questionnaire complete with pictures of the home in question, barns, out-buildings and all the rest. Once the description is complete, the land agent evaluates the features of the property concerned, in line with values in neighboring valleys. Because the Arrow Lakes people have lived for years in the shadow of the impending dam, there are very few local property sales which can set a pattern. To this point the investigation follows the lines of a normal real estate deal. But these people have to move, so the guidelines must differ. The land agents add something for cost of moving, for disruption and for land use. The eventual total and all pertinent data then go to Vancouver, where a special staff compares it with settlements already reached in the area and with values elsewhere. All this checking and crosschecking takes time, which sometimes leads to the charge that Hydro utilizes the time element as part of the bargaining procedure. Finally the offer goes to the property owner concerned. Very often it is considered too low, or rejected flatly. At this point the process of 'non-bargaining' begins. According to the terms of reference set down by the authority, land agents may not haggle. Theoretically the offered price is final and can be upset only by the findings of an arbitrator in expropriation proceedings.

The root of all evil? 53 But in actual fact, changes can be and are made if the property owner can show that some feature of his property has been neglected. The property owner is also encouraged to go into Hydro offices, where he is shown extensive files of property which he could reasonably purchase with the amount of money available. For a vigorous young logger with a tumbledown home, the Arrow Lakes displacement can be a chance to get out from under and start anew. But for older people who expected to live out their days on the old homestead, displacement is indeed a problem. Hydro officials admit that in these cases the amount paid for 'disruption' is sometimes inflated, because the market value of the property simply isn't enough to procure equivalent living accommodation. It is this intangible assessment of circumstances which leads to charges that there is no rhyme nor reason to Hydro offers. It's the old dilemma of balancing the need to guard the public purse against the possibility of causing undue hardships, and every case is different. Little things sometimes play a big role in the 'non-bargaining' process. One elderly woman placed great value on her bathtub - the finest bathtub in all the Arrow Lakes. Hydro enabled her to take it with her. The process of hoarding things against a rainy day is second nature in the Arrow Lakes, so there are cases on record of citizens labouriously packing old lumber from their purchased homes over mountain ranges to a new site. And there is the delicate matter of saving face. The farmer who has stormed the countryside declaring that he won't settle for less than $30,000 may in fact settle for a good deal less, providing he gets something. This is handled by the last minute 'discovery' of some intangible which permits a minor upward revision of the purchase offer. Hydro officials claim they are fair and generous without being extravagant and they have the files which tend to bear them out. But they agree with critics in one important respect. The old communities are disappearing, the old associations are gone and a leisurely way of life is dead. For this there can be no compensation in kind or in money, and to this extent the people of the Arrow Lakes are the victims of the common good.

It is the accepted thing in some circles to decry the work of the daily press. Nevertheless in this case it is significant that two reporters from competing newspapers, Hazlitt and Rutter, should both report in nicely balanced terms. Both found dilemmas; both found blacks and whites; and both refrained from resounding judgments. It is worth mentioning, by the way, that there was some organized opposition to Hydro, principally by a group known as the Arrow Lakes Property

54 People in the way Owners Protective Association. This group organized a demonstration at the Arrow dam site in October 1965 and thereby earned quite a bit of publicity. They are also credited by Hydro with having propagandized widely against the Authority's program and having stirred up a degree of recalcitrance in many people. Certainly in places considerably removed from the region the Arrow Lakes program attracted fire, notably from Ma Murray, the pyrotechnic publisher of the Bridge River News. It should be admitted however that almost any program of the Bennett government was liable to send Mrs Murray into orbit, and perhaps the Columbia program should not have felt especially honoured by her fulminations. There was also some coherent opposition from a group of Ukrainians south of Revelstoke where no fewer than ten cases had to be dealt with by expropriation. These observations make it clear that it is wrong to stigmatize opposition as perverse or wicked, as bureaucrats tend to do. Where does neighbourly solidarity end and organized resistance begin? When does firm conviction become irrational obstinacy? And anyway, why should anyone expect rational behaviour under such circumstances? It is clear from the records that some people displaced by the Arrow Lakes project were unable to accept the inevitable with equanimity. To that extent they are more to be pitied than pilloried for they lost not only home and community but personal serenity as well. The views of some of the displaced people in 1970, two years after the effective completion of the project, are recorded in chapter 14. They tend to reflect the situation sketched by Hazlitt. But what is important at this stage in the narrative is to establish the climate which prevailed in the Arrow Lakes for some four years. This climate stemmed very largely from the question of compensation: whether it was adequate, whether it was consistent, and how the business of negotiation was actually carried out. It enveloped everything else Hydro did in these four years, and is worth remembering throughout the chapters that follow. But first it is worth pointing out that even in human terms the processes of taking properties and resettling people were not all funereal, nor did they always find the dispossessed on the side of the angels. A rather humorous memorandum illustrates the point. It was written by Bert Watson, a discerning Hydro staff member of humane disposition. Names, places, and prices have been changed in this version but the essence of the situation remains untouched. llB: THB .TOHANNSONS OF BUR.WOOD

I travelled with the Johannsons to Canoe Monday to seek potential relocation sites.

The root of all evil? 55 We were met at Canoe by Mr Pepper, a real estate man who arranged to visit a house in the town. The house, about twelve to fifteen years old, was not in the best condition, but was pleasant, roomy, and conveniently located. It was rather obvious that Mr Johannson rejected the property before examining it inside; indeed, I feel he was prepared to reject it even before he arrived in Canoe. While in Canoe I viewed, from outside, a replacement property the Johannsons had selected on a trip through the area recently. This property is for sale at $20,000 according to Johannson. It is, I expect, no more than two years old, and is apparently a good and substantial house. Even so, my layman's guess is that $20,000 is a rather high price for this place. I formed the opinion that Mr Johannson has set his cap for this house and will exert all pressures to get it. He realizes that BC Hydro considers $12,000 a generous offering for his existing property but, of course, is in total disagreement. Mr Johannson has a frustrating defense which is difficult to puncture. This is his wife's apparent condition, which is used to rule out settlement in most areas. The only place they've found where Mrs Johannson is comfortable is in the Canoe area. And the only thing acceptable to them there is a house which is worth nearly twice the value of their present place when very generously estimated. I cannot fathom this medical conundrum; but I can't dispute it either. The same climatic circumstances and conditions cannot be duplicated, says Mr Johannson, in Vernon, Kelowna, or Penticton, where there is too much pollen; in Kamloops where it's too hot and too cold; in Salmon Arm, Enderby, etc., where there's too much farm dust; in Revelstoke where there's too much snow; in the Fraser Valley where it's too low; in the East Kootenays where it's too high; in Vancouver where it's too wet; or on Vancouver Island (well, who'd want to live there?) Indeed! To cap this a very revealing story was told of the Peace River about this time. It concerned a worried trapper who asked a Hydro engineer how much he thought he might get for his trapline. 'Oh, I guess they'll give you what it's worth,' said the engineer ingenuously. 'Hell,' said the trapper, 'I'll want a damn sight more than that.' With this we shall leave our very human beings of both camps and step chronologically back into our tale to June 1965.

7

The broad brush

Having felt the wind, we started to prepare public documents which would tell the people of the Arrow Lakes as precisely as was then possible how the Arrow reservoir would affect them and their homes. (Stakes showing the future high water mark had previously been driven into the ground at many points around the lakes so that most people had some idea how the scheme would affect them. But of course many of the stakes had been removed and there were many areas of uncertainty at this time.) The first document published was a broad-brush report entitled The New Outlook for the Arrow Lakes which was mailed to every home in the affected area in June 1965. This is reproduced almost in its entirety on the following pages. THE TREATY DAMS AND THEIR EFFECTS ON THE REGION

The Treaty dams The major works which will change the face of the Columbia basin are the three dams to be constructed under the Columbia River Treaty, namely the Mica, Arrow and Duncan Dams. Of these the Arrow Dam will flood the most inhabited land and will therefore necessitate most reconstruction. Reservoir levels The Arrow Lakes will be used for the storage of water. Thm every year the reservoir will be filled by the spring flood and will then be drawn down as required by the Treaty. The level of the reservoir in any month will fluctuate from year to year, but it will be highest during the summer months, which are

The broad brush 57 important for recreation and tourism. Normally the reservoir will be full during these months, unless there has been an exceptionally dry winter. Elimination of {foods The Arrow Dam will control the floods which used to plague the Arrow Lakes Region from time to time. Previously the flood level and flood damage in any year could never be predicted; from 1969 onward the maximum water level will be known and there will be no dwellings below that level to suffer damage. The new levels and their land effects Today the Arrow Lakes experience an extreme range in water level of about 40 feet. When the Arrow Dam is in operation they will have an extreme range of about 76 feet, the full reservoir level being some 36 feet higher than the previous maximum flood level. At no time will the water level fall below the minimum level under natural conditions. The new high water level and the effects of wind and wave will render some land uninhabitable; and in certain areas we must acquire additional land to allow for unstable banks or for difficulties in maintaining road access. As a result land will be purchased to the following minimum elevations: from Arrowhead to Revelstoke, 1455 feet; in the Narrows area, 1460 feet; elsewhere in the reservoir, 1453 feet. However, each piece of land is unique as regards soil, slope and exposure to waves, and additional land will be purchased wherever it is necessary to ensure that the area remaining will be safe. We propose to buy all the properties in the areas shown in Diagram 6. The inclusion of the Arrow Park area requires explanation. The fine silty soils of this area will be saturated as the Arrow reservoir rises and will become unstable when the water level is drawn down. This is expected to result in landslides extending considerable distances back from the shorelines. Also, these circumstances will make it impractical to provide access to the area by ferry. TOMORROW'S REGION

In the face of these changes, a great deal of thought has been given to the future of the Arrow Lakes Region. The most important factors for reconstruction will be as follows: Highway network The new highway network, to be built through the combined efforts of Hydro and the Department of Highways, will be of the greatest importance to the Region. The major elements in this will be as shown on Diagram 7. As a result of this new network the speed, continuity and safety of travel

58 People in the way

Upper Arrow Lake

\ loNakusp

Arrow Park ',,;:::;

J/

:.. (.a.East Arrow Park \ The Narrows

,,,,.YB urton

I?'

Need les.a.,~auq uier

Edgewood.a./ '

4

Lower Arrow Lake

Renata.,,_ .._Deer Park

ARROW DAM )

Robson

Q '

Castlega r0 t' Kinnai rd q ,

)

MAIN FLOODED AREAS 10

10 Mi les

DIAGRAM6

20

The broad brush 59

THE CENTRAL ARROW LAKES AREA 10

Ex isling Road Proposed Road

0

Miles DIAGRAM 7

10

60 People in the way into and out of the Edgewood-Nakusp area will be greatly improved; the cost of travel will be reduced; a wider choice of outside supply centres will be possible; and Nelson, Castlegar and Trail will become more accessible.

Parks and beaches Good parks, beaches and campsites could be developed at several spots at the new high water level. These features, together with attractions like the various hot springs, will result in the Region being able to provide many recreation attractions both for its own inhabitants and for tourists. In order to make full use of the opportunities, sites at Syringa Creek, Renata, Deer Park and Demars will be set aside for beach parks and these will be developed by the Department of Recreation and Conservation. Other promising sites will be investigated by the Department this summer and, if found attractive, will also be developed. Land for resettlement In the spring of 1969 a new ring of waterfront sites will emerge around the Arrow Lakes. Most of these will be owned by Hydro or directly by the Crown and will be made available for resettlement at soon as possible. In some cases this might be almost immediately; in some, as soon as new road locations have been decided; and in others, only after a number of years have passed and the land is clearly safe for settlement. In order to make the most of these land resources, sites will be dealt with systematically. First the best use of each area will be determined; then a system of priorities will be set up to allow for the claims of displaced residents, community and service organizations, commercial enterprises and other private citizens. Economic opportunities The economy of the Arrow Lakes Region will benefit enormously from the construction of the Treaty works and, both during and after the construction period, from tourism. In the next 20 years construction will cause as much as $100 million in payrolls alone to be spent within the Columbia Basin and much of this will be distributed widely throughout the Arrow Lakes Region. In addition to the dams themselves, surveys, clearing, road projects, the construction of new communities and other tasks will give employment to many men, who will require accommodation, food, supplies and services of various kinds. Local enterprise within the Region should be able to supply many of these needs, thus adding to the prosperity of the Arrow Lakes communities. The new highway network will open the way for tourists and holiday-makers.

The broad brush 61 A large volume of tourist traffic will be assured by the attraction of the dams, at which we will provide reception facilities for visitors. The new network will also bridge the gap between two trans-continental highways carrying hundreds of thousands of tourists every summer. Tourists spend money mainly on lodging, food and automobile needs, and if they can be persuaded to stop over - on shopping, entertainment and recreation also. Thus new opportunities will arise in the Region for stores, cafes, service stations and motels, both existing and new. There should also be new business for holiday resorts and ranches and for the sale of curios, handcrafts and local produce. A NEW SETTLEMENT PATTERN

Where should people, especially those whose homes are affected, fit into these plans? Some guidance on this question can be obtained by looking back to the past. Over the years the automobile and the road have replaced the steam boat and the river; the axe has given way to the power-saw and the team to the logging truck; the working radius has been stretched from a few miles to 45 minutes' driving time; and the working unit has grown from the small timber lot to the very large tree farm. But these changes have been superimposed on a settlement pattern which has changed little in the past two generations, for the old days left enduring marks on the Region. Many of the original communities have shrunk - or even disappeared entirely - although the original building lots remain; most orchards, with a few exceptions such as Renata, are abandoned and cleared land supports only a few horses or cattle; most river landings are deserted; the houses are often heavy with years and many are derelict. In other words, for reasons of necessity or sentiment many of the residents have retained the old settlement pattern. But the original reasons for that pattern vanished long ago. Today's opportunities The raising of the water level will wipe out much of the past; much more important, however, it now offers those who must move a unique opportunity to build vital new communities based on the circumstances of today, not of yesterday. The resettlement plans of some people are now becoming apparent. For example, our studies suggest that some people will resettle as close as possible to their former homes; some, especially older persons, will leave the Region entirely; and others will move to the larger centres of Revelstoke, Castlegar and Nakusp.

62 People in the way These trends are to be expected. However, between Edgewood and Arrowhead a challenging alternative is available. Much of the communities of Edgewood, Needles, Burton, Arrow Park, East Arrow Park, Beaton and Arrowhead will disappear entirely. The choice facing their residents is: whether to remain as near as possible to their accustomed localities or to take full advantage of the situation by settling in completely new communities. Their choices will depend partly on whether they wish to live close to their jobs and on whether they prefer rural or community life. Nevertheless, two facts should be considered carefully before vital resettlement decisions are made: (a) Many people today expect an increasing range of services and conveniences from their communities - a doctor, a hospital, a high school, churches, a range of stores, radio and TV repair services, telephones and a curling club, for example - but these can be provided only where there are enough people to support them. ( b) The automobile and good roads enable people to live in larger communities and travel considerable distances to work, thus reducing the need for small settlements tied to job locations. (It is equally possible, of course, for people to live close to their work or in rural areas and travel to the communities for their services.) These facts suggest that in the Edgewood-Nakusp area those who wish to enjoy the best available range of community services should first consider settling in Nakusp, which has a range of services unrivalled within 70 miles. On the other hand, for those who do not wish to settle in Nakusp, the fewer new communities there are, the better equipped they could be. Perhaps 150 families may settle in new communities. If they were to settle in three communities containing 30, 50 and 70 families respectively, not one of these could support much more than a general store, a garage and a two-room school, and none would have much to offer the surrounding countryside. But if all the families were to settle in one community it could support more services more efficiently, serve the surrounding area better and have more to offer the traveller and the tourist. Alternative sites for new communities In the Edgewood-Nakusp area there appear to be only three places suitable for the development of new communities (Diagram 7). Edgewood : A pleasant site is available on the tongue of land between Eagle Creek and lnonoaklin Creek. This site, which is already accessible to Vernon, will also have good access to Castlegar and Nelson when the new Koch Creek road is built. It would serve the lnonoaklin Valley fanning area. However, since it is several miles off the main highway a settlement there would probably remain relatively minor.

The broad brush 63 Burton: Several suitable sites are available for a new community, all with nearby land for rural settlement. However, in view of the existence of Nakusp on one side and the greater growth prospects of Fauquier on the other, Burton also would probably remain a minor community. Fauquier: There is a good site for a new community north of the ferry route, with nearby waterfront and ridge sites for rural homes. According to official records, it enjoys the best local climate in the area - almost three inches less rainfall than Edgewood and eight inches less than Nakusp. A settlement here could act as the supply centre for the lnonoaklin Valley. Most of all, being located at the key highway junction it would be accessible from all directions and would receive all the tourist traffic passing through the Region. Even under the most favourable circumstances a community at any of these sites would be small at the start, offering only limited services to its residents. Considering the future as well as the present, we believe Fauquier is the best available site. However, it is not for us to decide how or where people should live. Consequently we look forward to hearing the views of those concerned on the location of new communities.

What should a new community be like? An example of a new community designed for 150 families 1 is shown in Diagram 8. It should have the following characteristics: 1 It should be located and laid out to take advantage of views, lake frontage and other natural features. 2 It should have a well-designed centre containing the central facilities of the community - stores, bank, post office, church, community hall, hotel - together with parking space and a public park. This centre should be the most accessible point in the community and closely connected to the main road. 3 The school should be convenient to residential areas but located away from the main highway. 4 It should have utilities suited to its size and ground conditions: probably a piped water supply; septic tanks, provided the ground is porous; telephone and electric power; and, preferably, paved streets. 5 It should be developed compactly, with a minimum of empty lots, to minimize the cost of services and their maintenance. A note in retrospect: this may have been an unfortunate choice of size in that it may have given some people a vision of a highly improbable community. It was over-optimistic to expect that there could be such unanimity among the prospective settlers. Ah, hindsight !

64 People in the way

A NEW COMMUNITY FOR APPROXIMATELY 150 FAMILIES (FIJ illustrative ptKposes only)

Streets arranged to minimize mxnber of intersections with the main highway lnterilJ streets laid out to minimize lhroogh traffic Typical lot size approx. 1/4 acre 500

0

FEET

R11al Holdings

DIAGRAM 8

The broad brush 65 6 The lots themselves could vary in size depending on the desires of prospective owners, but many people would presumably want purely residential lots no bigger than they could easily maintain. However, new communities may not fill all resettlement needs, for there will be some who prefer to settle on relatively large lots in rural areas. We will give them first choice of the stock of land which we will own when our land purchases are complete. Residents' role We have attempted to provide information that will help displaced residents to decide where they wish to resettle. In addition there will be opportunities for questions and public discussion. After that, those concerned must make their decisions. This we must stress. Building new communities cannot be a one-sided business. Our resources will be necessary to help create them; but those who will live in them must first say what they want and be prepared to work with us to achieve it. THE NEXT STEP

Public meetings are being arranged at points throughout the Arrow Lakes Region to give residents an opportunity to ask questions and to discuss local situations with our representatives. Following these meetings, some time will probably be required for those concerned to discuss the situation among themselves and possibly to form local groups and appoint spokesmen. As soon as possible after that we will proceed to find out what the individuals and groups facing resettlement wish to do. To accomplish this we may hold further meetings or conduct personal interviews. When all this has been done we will immediately prepare final plans for new communities, land disposal, housemoving and all the other action programmes involved. In the meantime this Plan offers food for thought and for decision. The next step lies with the people of the Region.

Simple as this report may seem, its birth was not an easy one. 2 The essence of the problem was that raising the top water level by thirty-six feet would do two things: it would displace over 2000 people, and would greatly reduce 2 What follows is an analysis of the working process as I experienced it. However, an inkling of difficulties at the board of directors level is given by a retrospective note to me by Dr Keenleyside: 'You are not, I think, aware of the trouble experienced in getting the Hydro Board to approve anything as "extravagant" as The New Outlook, or the development program in general.'

66 People in the way the amount of land available for resettlement in the valley. That supply was already very limited; just how limited no one then suspected. The first survey of basic data had revealed the upsetting fact that in keeping with the main ( engineering) thrust of the project up to this point the contour maps which had been made of the Arrow Lakes area covered only limited areas above the high water level. In particular, some of the most probable resettlement sites were not adequately mapped. Much more serious, however, and much less quickly remedied, was the fact that no specific soils examination had been made of the new shoreline. The first difficulty was soon overcome and caused no delay. The second, however, involved detailed investigations by outside experts and was still not completely resolved as late as November 1965. The reason for concern was that many of the slopes at the foot of the mountains consisted of silty soils whose stability would change radically when saturated by the rising waters. Dry, the slopes were completely stable, apart from some erosion at the river's edge; saturated, they would be both heavy and weak,which was expected to result in the collapse of large masses of soil. That this was no figment of an expert's imagination had been made very clear on the Columbia south of the border. There some massive 'alcove' slides had taken place which affected land as much as half-a-mile back from the water's edge. The reports of the soils experts, when they dribbled in over the months following, were disturbing. They put out of bounds almost all of the strip land, especially in the Narrows, which we had hoped to use for scattered resettlement. They cast grave doubts for a considerable period on two of the principal sites for new settlements, Fauquier and Edgewood, and contributed to the long delay in the completion of resettlement plans. This in turn greatly upset the people concerned, especially the impatient band at Edgewood who not unnaturally concluded that Hydro was stalling and had no intention of encouraging resettlement there. In fact we were assuring people in public as late as May 1965 that there would be lots of land available for resettlement, a situation which did nothing to enhance our credibility when the engineering facts ultimately became available. Most of all, the reports unexpectedly turned thumbs down on West Arrow Park, necessitating total abandonment of that community, contrary to the expectations of both the inhabitants and ourselves. One of the greatest difficulties which Hydro faced in the planning stages was that of effective collaboration with the provincial government. Yet this was vital to a complete development program rather than just a patch-up job. The main elements in such a program were completion of the highway system both within and beyond the Central Arrow Lakes, and development of lakeside parks and camping grounds.

The broad brush 67 One of the most important of these difficulties concerned the site of the bridge which was to cross the Arrow Lakes at Fauquier. This location had already involved a choice by the highways department, in that an alternative site just below Burton had been considered and rejected. However, slow as the site investigations were, Hydro had always been led to believe that the final outcome was not in doubt, and the Columbia Newsletter, No 10, in February 1966 announced that work on the bridge would start that same summer. Apart from its significance to the provincial highway network and to the Arrow Lakes region this bridge was crucial to the presumed advantages of the Fauquier resettlement site, advantages which Hydro continued to stress throughout the time of resettlement decisions. However, the promised bridge has not been built to this day. 3 Apart from this difficulty, the main elements of the overall highway system were reasonably well understood at the field engineer's level - 'reasonably' because although rough cost-benefit studies showed where the highways ought to go from a functional point of view, there were two important qualifications affecting the southeast connection. The first was that no detailed survey had been made of the Koch Creek route. Thus the engineering implications and cost of the route were not known, and in that extremely rugged mountain country with an estimated peak elevation for the highway of about 6000 feet, construction costs could be very high indeed. The second was trouble of an entirely different kind - political opposition at the Castlegar end of the lakes to the Koch Creek route. One of the 'casualty areas' of the Columbia project was the thin ten-mile ribbon of development north of Castlegar. This contained a mixture of development, mainly summer cottages for Castlegar and Trail residents, some permanent housing, a couple of little beaches, a tiny cluster of homes, and a combination general store/restaurant/boats-for-hire operation at Deer Park. Hydro proposed to replace the original road only as far as Syringa Creek, where very steep and rocky slopes would have made housing impossible and highway construction extremely expensive. Many local people opposed the Koch Creek proposal in favour of a lakeside road running all the way from the Arrow dam to the central area of the lakes. This opposition would not have been unusual ( every district has its own interests and its own pet project) but for the fact that the local MLA, a member of the provincial cabinet, continued to support this proposal even after an apparently firm decision had been made by the department of highways and presumably the cabinet. 3 One reason seems to have been unusually poor foundation conditions; another the onset of 'tight money' and the fact that to make complete sense both the bridge and the costly mountain route to the southeast would have had to be built together.

68 People in the way However, the seesaw of political uncertainty became somewhat wearing for those concerned with timely production of plans. The second element in the provincial segment of the proposed regional development program consisted of four lakeside park sites ( designated by Hydro staff) which Hydro acquired in the course of its land acquisition program. The Authority proposed to donate these sites to the provincial government on the understanding that they would be developed as parks by the department of recreation and conservation. There was no disagreement with parks branch officials, but they were in no position to commit themselves on the nature and timing of side development. To that extent Hydro's position was again somewhat tenuous. Apart from such difficulties at the working level, Hydro's real need was to obtain a firm commitment from the provincial government to the regional development program, since without its co-operation no firm plans or public statements could be made. Dr Keenleyside therefore took the matter up with Premier Bennett. As a result the Columbia Ministers Committee was formed consisting of the ministers of highways, lands and forests, municipal affairs, agriculture, and recreation and conservation, chaired by Dr Keenleyside. This committee considered the program formulated by Hydro and presumably agreed to it, for the program was tentatively allocated a special five-year capital budget of some twenty million dollars. The highway and park decisions already described were therefore 'made' and included in The New Outlook, which was then given wide publicity throughout the lakes. 4 Just about this time, however, the provincial government apparently began to be concerned about the extent of its capital spending, for early in 1966 the committee seems to have 'died' and its program with it. In the meantime, Hydro had in good faith announced the agreed plans for parks, highways, and the bridge, none of which materialized within the construction period of the Arrow project. Again, and through no fault of its own, the Authority lost credibility in the Arrow Lakes. The New Outlook for the Arrow Lakes showed what was to be done in that region. It did not show a number of other matters which were investigated and for some reason or other did not ultimately feature in that plan. Some of these are worthy of mention. 4 Perhaps it was merely because I was so keenly awaiting decisions from it that this committee, like the proverbial watched kettle, seemed to move so slowly. I suspect that meetings were difficult to arrange. In any case, there appeared to be no interdepartmental staff work attached to it, and it seemed that nothing was happening. In the meantime the clock was ticking on and the Arrow Lakes inhabitants got less patient and more suspicious.

The broad brush 69 FISH AND GAME

At the request of the BC fish and game branch a study was carried out by the branch, at Hydro's expense, of the implications of the reservoir for wildlife and fish. This showed that the immediate Arrow Lakes area was of minor significance for wildlife, which was scarcely surprising in view of the very small amount of land affected and the vastness of its hinterland. Consequently no action on wildlife was necessary. The fish situation was slightly different. The Arrow Lakes were never known as fisherman's country as were the Kootenay Lakes, but they did sustain some trout fishing at certain spots. These spots depended on the mountain streams tributary to the lakes, where the sand and gravel fans built up over the centuries supported spawning. These fans, however, would now be under thirty to forty feet of water in the spawning season and would be useless for that purpose. New fans would undoubtedly form over a long period but in the meantime little could be done to conserve the small existing fish stocks. 5 It may be noted in passing that circumstances were quite different on the Kootenay Lake, which was affected by the Duncan Dam. Here the fish (Kokanee salmon, a land-locked species) were both plentiful and renowned for their sporting qualities, and the dam would sit right on top of the principal spawning grounds. A fish census program, started in 1965 by the fish and game branch, led in 1966 to the installation of an artificial spawning channel just west of the dam. This new channel, a multi-looped bypass about two miles long, was lined with the same type of smooth gravel as the original spawning ground, very carefully graded to a mix and texture which the fish could adjust to make small pockets for their eggs. The channel was a great success from the first; the survival rate in the spring following the first spawning season in the fall of 1967 was three times the survival rate under natural conditions. ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES

It was known that there had been some activity in the Arrow Lakes by Indian tribes. For example the lakes were said to have taken their name from arrows shot into trees at one point on the shore, and at another point there 5 At least this is the way it appeared in 1965 when it became clear that the fish and

game branch had neither basic data nor funds to acquire the data. Certainly, nothing had been done by 1970.

70 People in the way TABLE 2 Lots created

Houses moved in

Houses built

Robson (Castlegar) Nakusp Revelstoke Christina Lake

52 25

18

9

26 6

TOTAL

95

30

32

7 11

3

0

were rock paintings. Studies were undertaken by archaeologists from the University of British Columbia which found and examined some Indian camp remains at the south end of the lakes. It was concluded that the lakes had never been settled but had only been traversed by Indian tribes in transit between the Okanagan and Kootenay Lakes. No further action by Hydro was deemed necessary. MOSQUITOES

One question which had concerned Hydro at one point was the possibility that the falling of the lake level might leave pockets of marsh land which would act as a breeding ground for mosquitoes. Checking with the department of agriculture revealed that breeding took place around June when the reservoirs would almost invariably be full. So this did not appear to be a real danger, and in fact in 1970 several people reported that mosquitoes were not nearly as bad as before. LAND AND HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS

It is worth recording that, in addition to the new communities which it developed in the Central Arrow Lakes, Hydro undertook a considerable program of land and housing development at several points. The extent of this program is shown in Table 2.

8

People and plans

The New Outlook for the Arrow Lakes did four significant things: it pinpointed the areas which would be wiped out by the new reservoir; it gave an overall view of the Arrow Lakes region as it would be on completion of the work, including possible sites for new communities; it gave the displaced people a general idea of what Hydro was willing to do to establish these new communities; and it committed us to meet the people face-to-face in order to work out resettlement plans with them. It was intended to be a thoroughly positive and helpful document, and to that end it had certainly committed the Authority to specific actions. And this involved Hydro in signing a blank cheque, for at that stage no one knew how many people would choose to resettle and therefore how much this policy would cost. 1 But there were matters of some delicacy involved: advising without appearing to dictate; and refusing to be bulldozed by some of the inhabitants who, without benefit of facts, had already made up their minds what to do. Hydro's staff knew the facts and something of their significance and to that extent had a clear obligation to give advice. Specifically that advice, put in the form of a question, was, 'Why not build one community of some size instead of several hamlets of minimal strength?' A reading of The New Outlook will show how many ways were found of offering that advice: 1 That did not mean, of course, that there were no views on the subject within Hydro's staff or within the provincial civil service. The water comptroller, no stranger to the Arrow Lakes, once told me that there would be no need for new communities as the people of the lakes would be only too glad, given a chance, to 'get the hell out of it'.

72 People in the way historical exposition, a listing of the values of the larger community, and passing reference to some of the drawbacks of very small places. But having said these things Hydro declined to play God: 'it is not for us to decide how or where people should live. We look forward to hearing the views of those concerned.' This is the kind of step that one can take only out of conviction, without having any real idea how it will go down. There were those who held that, given inaction on Hydro's part, both the people and the problem would go away; and it is possible that only a little more uncertainty, confusion, and worry might well have discouraged many to the point of giving up. And there were those who could not see the point of it all: 'Just tell them what you're going to do and they'll fall in line if they want to and go away if they don't.' As it was, I had scarcely set foot in the Arrow Lakes area when I was set upon by residents of Edgewood and invited to meet them in the Legion Hall. At that meeting it was stated very strongly that however the rest of the Arrow Lakes might feel on the subject of resettlement the people of Edgewood were unanimous that they were going to resettle right there. But especially for the neophyte in the region this had several bothersome aspects. The first of these was that their wishes were being expressed in total absence of knowledge about the future of the region, about new roads, bridges, land supply, or Hydro's resettlement policies. The second was that it appeared the Edgewood proceedings were being dominated by one man, Bill Haggart, the local forest ranger and a man of strong views and vigorous expression. There was nothing wrong about either the views or the expression; the question was: did they represent the feelings of Haggart's neighbours as well as himself? We were not sure, especially since at one point in our meeting with them the Edgewood people had laughed out loud at one of his more highflying claims ( to the effect, as I remember it, that the rest of the world, or at least the world of Needles and Fauquier, would soon be beating a path to the door of New Edgewood). We remembered too some neighbourly nudges (the penalty of a small community?) and reactionary glances as Bill expounded his faith. Were the troops behind their leader or not? There were other voices which advanced the view we ourselves came to hold: that it was time for the people to abandon their outpost mentality and pool their resources in one new community. And lastly we were told that half a century before there had been a settlement on the spot designated for New Edgewood and that it had been abandoned because of the intolerable downdraught which funnelled through the narrow neck of the Inonoaklin Valley at that point. (We were unable to confirm this but it troubled us at the time.) With all these considerations in our minds, as well as our natural reluc-

People and plans 73 tance to father a white elephant at Hydro's expense, we decided that we would postpone any commitment until the picture should become a little clearer; that is, until we had garnered the views of the Edgewood inhabitants individually once they had all the facts before them. As it turned out this was not a comfortable stance to maintain, for our first meeting had been held in August 1964 and The New Outlook was not released until June 1965, although our plans had been ready since January 1965. There were two compelling reasons for this delay. One was the time required to engage the Columbia Ministers Committee and get it committed to the program ultimately outlined in The New Outlook. The other was considerable doubt for some time about the stability of the banks at the New Edgewood site. The soils experts' first report was that the banks would have to be so flat and would leave so little width in the tongue of land that settlement would not be possible. It was only a second examination that led them to conclude that their first findings were too cautious and that a community could indeed be developed there. But no matter how compelling the reasons, the hiatus from August to June was a long one, overlapping from one construction season well into another, and the conclusions of the people concerned can be imagined: Hydro was stalling; the image of the 1961 hearings was the true one after all. Nor was this feeling dispelled by the hopeful announcements made in all good faith by the Columbia Newsletter from time to time that the promised plans were just around the corner.2 But this byplay was merely an embarrassing prelude to the sequence of events we had planned, starting with the publication of The New Outlook. This sequence was: (1) to prepare and publicize a general plan; (2) to present the plan and discuss it in public meetings; (3) to interview every family affected and attempt to determine its plans for resettlement; ( 4) to prepare specific resettlement proposals based on these surveys and have them approved in principle by Hydro; (5) to present these proposals to the groups concerned for information and discussion; ( 6) to seek specific commitments for land from prospective settlers; and (7) to design the new communities based on these commitments. This sequence was carried out as planned with no serious delay. By midsummer 1966, almost three years ahead of the scheduled filling of the 2 The Newsletter, No 2, 18 September 1964, forecast public meetings on the plan 'around February and March'; No 5, 19 February 1965, said that we would be announcing all plans 'in another month or so'; No 6, 28 April 1965, announced that a general plan had been completed and 'will be presented in the near future.' The best laid plans ...

74 People in the way reservoir, development of the new community sites was underway and about half of the available lots had been committed. In fact, construction of some houses had actually started by about that time, so that the main objective, not to lose a construction season, was achieved. However, it would be wrong to suggest that the process flowed on without incident. The whole operation became easier as time went on because, no doubt, we and the people got to know one another and because Hydro's proposals became more specific with the passage of time. From the start meetings were well attended; in fact I suspect there was an element of community entertainment about them, if not Roman holiday, an analogy I carefully eschewed lest there be any loose thinking about Christians and lions. One interesting thing was that it was never necessary to call a public meeting in any formal way. (The only newspaper in the central Arrow Lakes was a weekly and thus no help for publicizing short-notice meetings.) We simply checked and arranged casually with the apparent spokesman and the bush telegraph did the rest. The Arrow Lakes society was certainly not based on paper. The only really tense meeting was held at West Arrow Park, and it was tense for good reason. At the beginning of the project and in the absence of advice to the contrary we had assumed that West Arrow Park would constitute one of the more useful resettlement areas in the region. It was an assembly point for some of Celgar's most productive forest areas and afforded access to some of the most attractive upland meadows in that part of British Columbia. But as the preliminary river bank surveys progressed it appeared that a large cloud hung over not only the riverside area but also much of its hinterland. As more detailed examination went on the cloud darkened. The silty nature of the river banks was clearly apparent, but the planning staff was not ready for the final verdict that massive 'alcove' slides extending as much as half a mile back from the existing river bank were feared. Nor was this the only cause for concern. The slide might also cause a wave up to forty feet high in the Narrows. In view of this and the continuing uncertainty attached to the new river banks, the department of highways refused to operate a ferry service in the area. But of all this the people of West Arrow Park knew nothing. I looked forward to the West Arrow Park visit with trepidation. At the same time it appeared essential that a face-to-face meeting be held in which Hydro's sense of responsibility and good faith could be demonstrated and the inhabitants' questions answered. And questions there were. Of all the bare and age-worn community halls in the Arrow Lakes this one seemed that night to be the barest. And the people who packed the long lines of benches and chairs and leaned against the walls were the least familiar to me and the most strained. The general tenor of the meeting was

People and plans 7 5 set when one man asked if they might tape my remarks: they were going to anyway, taking no chances of misunderstandings or of promises made and 'forgotten.' I reminded them of our promise to give them the facts they would need, and apologized for being the bearer of bad news. I told them simply that West Arrow Park as they knew it would cease to exist. A silent shock-wave ran through the meeting, but they said nothing. I told them why. Then the questions started. There were good, searching questions coming from intelligent and vigorously independent people who were in the habit of doing for themselves anything that had to be done. The only specific question I remember now was typical: why couldn't the department of highways operate a ferry in the Narrows in a fifty-foot range of water level? It was being done in the Yukon - why not here? I gave them my well-prepared reasons, wrung from our engineers and from their consultants, and in the end they were accepted. The only semblance of a scene was staged by the local school teacher, an 'outsider,' who delivered an impassioned speech of indignation and made his exit, dragging his small son with him, all of which was totally ignored by the meeting. Even so, there were undercurrents in the hall of which I was happily unaware: a small group of men strategically gathered at the door had been quietly debating whether I should be tarred and feathered or merely thrown in the river. Saner views prevailed however and the evening passed without incident. I must pay tribute to these people. Few of them were young. Several had lived there for upwards of fifty years. Now the very land they had broken, as well as their homes, was to be violated. They took these blows with remarkable fortitude and later issues of the Columbia Newsletter reported some of the oldest of them re-established and looking forward undaunted to a new life on the 'wrong' side of the lake. For example, the Newsletter, No 20, November 1967, quotes Alex Mauchline: 'I came here from just outside Glasgow, Scotland, in 1909. A strong wind brought us across the ocean - most of it was from people telling us about the fortune we could make growing fruit on the Arrow Lake. But when the men saw the timber and bush that had to be cleared before a fruit tree could be planted, most of the men got to work in the woods, or moved to the towns and went back to the trades they had in the old country. We had a good life in West Arrow Park, and were sorry to leave.' Mrs Mauchline agreed: 'But now we're here in Nakusp and comfortable, and we like it. Some of our neighbours came here too, and that makes it nice. But I wish I were a few years younger because I see a real future for this area, with all the new and improved roads and the dams for tourist attractions ... This country is a real sportsman's

7 6 People in the way TABLE 3 Households

1965 estimate

1970 approximate

Fauquier Burton Edgewood

25 12

so

40 18 27

paradise, and it won't take the tourists long to discover it once the roads are fixed.' That was the true spirit of the Arrow Lakes. Some of the problems inherent in the first surveys of resettlement intentions are worth mentioning. These surveys were essential as a basis for plans for new communities, but at the beginning they suffered from certain drawbacks which, quite apart from the pressure of time, made a mockery of any thoughts of refined survey methods. The first difficulty was that at the time of the early surveys a great many people had not yet been compensated for their property and therefore did not know what their working capital would be. Compounding their difficulty, it was not then possible for Hydro to be specific about the cost of lots in the proposed new communities. At that stage also uncertainty about the intentions of neighbours and friends may have inhibited responses. This is not to imply that people did not know their own minds or were bound by the decisions of others, but simply that they were conscious of their communities as factors in their lives. But most of all we were conscious that we were asking people to state their intentions regarding things that were quite unreal at that stage. It is true that we used air photos and scale models to identify the new community sites. Nevertheless, people were being asked not only to imagine that their own familiar communities did not exist but to visualize hypothetical communities which would be set in a radically altered landscape. The cumulative effect of these difficulties for those whose responses were now required can well be imagined. For us the need to know was nevertheless compelling. There was therefore no alternative for the survey staff but to listen carefully to people's problems and their analyses, to answer questions as honestly as possible, and to try to sense the probably decisive considerations in each case. It is interesting to compare the estimates of households made after the first round of individual visits in the summer of 1965 with the occupancy figures of summer 1970 (Table 3). 8 3 At least part of the difference between these two sets of figures is due to the fact that we gave no thought at the beginning to renters, that is, those who did not own property.

People and plans 77 The process of determining the probable resettlement pattern went on for a full year. The New Outlook was published in June 1965, after which doorto-door surveys were conducted. This was followed in January 1966 by a preliminary statement of Hydro's plans entitled New Communities for the Arrow Lakes and in June 1966 by a supplementary report which showed detailed lots and prices in all three new communities. A year after the preliminary survey the situation was considerably improved for people's decision-making. The compensation program was more than half complete; the new sites were visible; the cost of lots was known; and some people had made their decisions and invested in buildings or foundations. In short, the people of the valley, as well as Hydro, were getting on with the job.

9

The new communities

When all the broad-brush work had been done the development of the new communities loomed up as the next job. Sketch plans were prepared by Hydro's planning group on the basis of the results of the intention surveys and somewhat rough ground information. These plans were then handed over to the reservoirs engineer for engineering design, followed by development by contract. These communities were equipped by Hydro with services and facilities appropriate to their size and to modem standards. All have modern water systems, but Fauquier alone required storm drains and a piped sewer system (leading to a sewage lagoon) because of the impervious nature of its subsoil. All have power and telephone services, those at Fauquier being underground. Each community has an elementary school, a community hall, at least one church, and a park. There are stores in all three and post offices in Fauquier and Edgewood; the latter also retaining its Red Cross outpost hospital. Fauquier built a nine-hole goH course, the first in the central Arrow Lakes, intended to serve all three communities. When Hydro learned that 2000 dollars had already been raised towards such a project by the residents it offered to contribute 15,000 dollars, plus water supply, engineering assistance, and the land at a yearly lease of ten dollars. Later, it contributed an old school building for a clubhouse. Most of the houses were built at least in part by their owners, but Hydro re-established thirty-seven sound houses it had acquired, many of which were sold back to their original owners and to others. (As the 1970 survey showed, this seems to have been a very satisfactory part of the program.) So once the plans were made, based on consultation with the people

The new communities 79 concerned, everyone settled down and lived happily ever after? Well, not exactly ... After the series of meetings in the summer of 1965 it was reported to the chairman that the meetings had gone over 'quite well' but the attitude of the residents was 'show me.' This was in fact only the beginning of a threeyear process of community-building which varied greatly from place to place. Burton developed relatively painlessly; Fauquier developed slowly amid considerable frustration to its residents; and Edgewood was enveloped in protest and controversy from beginning to end. It may be that the major factor in all the troubles was simply the time required to get the essential things done. The longer it took to complete the compensation process, build roads, and establish the visible infrastructure of the new communities, the longer the period of indecision, turmoil, and trouble for the people concerned. This was by no means unforeseen. But clearly time was not the only factor. It will be recalled that in the spring of 1965 the minister of highways announced the 'decision' to build a bridge across the Lakes at Fauquier. This was discussed in matter-of-fact fashion as a fait accompli in the Columbia Newsletter, No 10, February 1965. But the bridge ~as never constructed. Neither was the Koch Creek highway shown in The New Outlook as connecting Fauquier to the Nelson-Castlegar area. These were crucial links in the regional framework and governed the prospects, both relative and absolute, of Fauquier. With both bridge and highway constructed Fauquier would have been the fulcrum of the region, enjoying the benefits of three-way accessibility and tourist fl.ow. Under these circumstances it seemed reasonable to assume that the people of the lnonoaklin Valley might have oriented themselves a little more to Fauquier and a little less to Edgewood. Edgewood itself might have appealed to somewhat fewer people and Fauquier to more. With no bridge the whole pattern reverted to the status quo in which Edgewood had long been the service and social centre for the Inonoaklin Valley. On the basis of the ostensibly firm highway decision Hydro had committed itself to support of Fauquier and soon gave physical expression to that commitment by starting site development as planned. But continued delay and the apparent abandonment of the bridge gave rise to new forces and consequences, which are well described from Hydro's viewpoint in a letter sent to the minister of lands and forests on 12 May 1967 by the manager of Hydro's land division. Before Dr Keenleyside left on vacation, he called Mr Gaglardi [minister of highways] and urged that a public announcement be made without delay re~

80 People in the way garding the intention of the Government to build the Needles Bridge. Our concern in the matter is twofold: (a) The philosophy behind our community resettlement program is that the numerous scattered communities that presently exist should be replaced by one major community (Fauquier) and two minor ones (Edgewood and Burton). Many people on the west side of the lake who formerly favoured Fauquier are now looking to Edgewood as a place to reside, to the point that we are under considerable pressure to expand Edgewood. We still believe our original concept was correct but the announcement a year or so ago that the bridge would not be built knocked the props out from under it. A firm announcement now that the bridge will be built would be of great assistance. ( b) This is the year when most of the displaced people have to make the decision where they will live. At the moment we think many people on the west side of the lake are being strongly influenced by the propaganda of a vociferous group who are urging them to reside in Edgewood. An immediate announcement on the bridge might influence them to make a decision that will be in their best interests in the long run. This letter serves to re-introduce two matters which bear on the history of

Edgewood's development. Both have already been mentioned in connection with the development of the Arrow Lakes plan: first, the long delay in producing a plan for Edgewood; second, the role of William Haggart. The first had probably implanted in the minds of the Edgewood people an attitude which was to be strengthened by many subsequent events as they interpreted them. The feelings of the people will be quite clear from the correspondence which is cited later; the significance of Haggart's participation might as well be established now. William Haggart was forest ranger in charge of the BC forest station at Edgewood for almost twenty years before his retirement in 1965. His general vigour and refreshing directness apart, he was a power to be reckoned with on the Edgewood scene because of the responsibilities that attended his office. As forest ranger he administered grazing permits on Crown land; he controlled the use of forest service equipment (boats, trucks, bulldozers, etc.) which can be crucially important in times of crisis in rural areas; and he had the power to press men into service for fighting forest fires. In a rural setting these are no mean powers, and when they belong to a man of strong but pleasant personality they confer on him considerable stature and authority. Despite this it seems from the records that a succession of Hydro representatives had reservations about Haggart's credibility. It will be recalled that in 1965 Hydro's planning staff came to suspect

The new communities 81 that Haggart was given to overstatement and did not command complete support from the Edgewood community. In June 1967, when the planners had long gone from the scene, one of Hydro's new representatives observed in a report to head office: 'Mr Haggart is a strong spokesman for the New Edgewood Community Development Committee - but I do not believe his views are completely supported by all members of his Committee.' The purpose of this recital is not to denigrate Haggart but to establish the image he had created in the minds of Hydro officials, bearing in mind that he was the most active, visible, and articulate champion Edgewood had. The clear import of this is that Haggart was hoist with his own petard not disbelieved but always discounted to some extent. In the context of Edgewood's two years of development this was probably not unimportant, for the situation contained all the elements of a vicious circle: Edgewood had, in its view, good reason to distrust Hydro; Hydro had, in its, good reason to distrust Edgewood. This was the backdrop to the period during which New Edgewood took shape. Round one was fought over the BC Forest Service Station relocated at Fauquier but originally located at Edgewood and presided over by Haggart until his retirement in 1965. The correspondence which follows tells the story as it shuttled from the Lakes to Victoria and back, and up and down the administrative ladder in the process. From Hydro's field office to the manager of the land division, 23 September 1966: I today learned, with disappointment, that the BC Forest Service intends to retain its Edgewood Ranger Station at Edgewood rather than move to Fauquier. This also means that Fauquier would lose the three homes which the Forest Service intends to build for its employees. I feel we should do all we can to locate the Ranger Station in Fauquier as originally planned.

From the manager of the land division to the chairman, 27 September 1966: We have certainly been counting on having the Forest Service Ranger Station located in Fauquier along with the three homes which would be associated with it. Would it be possible for you to speak to Mr Williston in an effort to direct these facilities back to Fauquier where we feel they properly belong?

And, finally and conclusively, from the manager of the land division to the Nakusp office, 5 October 1966: Dr Keenleyside informed me this morning that Mr Williston informs him that

82 People in the way neither he nor anyone in his Department in Victoria has heard of any plan to locate the Forest Service facilities in Edgewood. Insofar as they are concerned, these buildings are to be located in Fauquier as originally planned.

Round two was fought on a much broader base. It was started by a broadside from one of Edgewood's most respected citizens to the minister of lands and forests, Mr Williston, on 15 March 1967. Dear Sir: A number of my neighbors in Edgewood and vicinity have asked me to inform you of a very obvious rising tide of bitterness and frustration among those who will presently be compelled to remove and find new homes before the flooding of the Lower Arrow Lakes becomes fact. We know the BC Hydro and Power Authority is responsible to implement the damming and flooding of the lake. We wonder if you are fully aware that in the minds of many people BC Hydro and Power Authority is synonymous with Social Credit Party? The business ethics used by BC Hydro here are bound to reflect credit or otherwise on our government whether justifiable or not. You will readily appreciate how exasperating it is for a person to write BC Hydro, only to receive such a long-delayed reply that they come to believe BC Hydro is completely indifferent to their problems or dilemmas, to say nothing of common business courtesy. Or when someone, having completed preliminary business with a BC Hydro official, believing they have reached an emphatic understanding, is approached by another Hydro employee, who, they discover, is not bound by what was previously understood, but dissolves and dismisses the situation in his favor by declaring that Mr So and So is no longer with the BC Hydro. Incidents of business methods and dealings, not to the credit of BC Hydro, are topics of everyday conversation. You will readily understand that the unfortunate incident relating to the late T.G. Mead, has had a tendency to confirm the details of such incidents as factual. As far as can be ascertained, the BC Hydro and Power Authority has not initiated any plan to relocate either the BC Forest Service or the Red Cross Outpost Hospital in the new townsite of Edgewood. According to rumor the BC Forest Service is to be relocated in Fauquier. Such a move would locate this branch of the Forest Service in territory which is under Celgar management, and put the Lower Arrow Lakes between it and ninety per cent of the forest area which it controls. Hastening to a fire would necessitate crossing the lake by ferry which is delayed for as long as one and one half hours by log booms being towed down the lake. We feel that unnecessary hardship is being imposed upon people here. Two brothers aged eighty-four and ninety-two are a case in point, yet our senior

1 The Narrows, 1964

2 The end of an era: the passing of the Minto

3 The Hugh Keenleyside Dam (formerly the Arrow dam)

4 The new waterfront at Nakusp

5 New Burton, looking south

6 New Edgewood

7 New Fauquier

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